About 71,600 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Endoscopy: Procedure, Types, What To Expect - Cleveland Clinic

    During an endoscopy, a healthcare provider places a long, thin tube (endoscope) inside your body until it reaches the organ or area they need to check. Most endoscopes have a light and special camera at …

  2. Endoscope - Wikipedia

    An endoscope is an inspection instrument composed of an image sensor, optical lens, a light source and a mechanical device, which is used to look deep into the body by openings such as the mouth or anus.

  3. Endoscopy: Purpose, Procedure, Risks - WebMD

    Jan 5, 2024 · Endoscopy is a nonsurgical procedure that can be used to examine your digestive tract. Using an endoscope, a flexible tube with a light and camera attached to it, your doctor can view …

  4. Endoscopy: Types, preparation, procedure, and risks

    Mar 31, 2026 · Scientists developed capsule endoscopy, which is an endoscopy that involves a wireless camera, in the mid-1990s. The camera is small enough to fit into a capsule (roughly the size of a …

  5. Endoscopy: Purpose, Preparation, Risks, and Results - Health

    Mar 14, 2026 · Endoscopy uses a thin, flexible, lighted tube with a camera (endoscope) to examine inside your body. Doctors may use it to diagnose and treat various conditions.

  6. Upper endoscopy - Mayo Clinic

    Jul 2, 2024 · An endoscopy procedure involves inserting a long, flexible tube called an endoscope down your throat and into your esophagus. A tiny camera on the end of the endoscope allows views of …

  7. Endoscopy - Harvard Health

    Mar 22, 2025 · The endoscope allows doctors to examine the inside of certain tube-like structures in the body. Most endoscopes transmit the doctor's view to a video screen. Most endoscopes have …

  8. What Is an Endoscope? How It Works and What to Expect

    An endoscope is a thin, flexible or rigid tube with a camera and light source that lets doctors see inside your body without major surgery.

  9. Know your endoscope

    Recent innovation with the now commonly available variable stiffness and the new overtube ShapeLock Endoscopic Guide (ShapeLock, USGI Medical, San Clemente, CA) has allowed endoscopist more …

  10. Endoscope - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

    An endoscope is defined as a medical instrument consisting of a rigid or flexible tube used to visually inspect the interior surfaces of an organ by inserting it through a natural or created orifice.