Haemorrhoids
Anal continence requires the apposition of three mucosal pads which:
- are composed of subepithelial vascular cushions
- are found in the left lateral, right anterolateral and right posterolateral portions of the anal canal
- form haemorrhoids when the pads become enlarged and congested
Hemorrhoids are classified as:
- internal
- external
- mixed (concurrent internal and external hemorrhoidal disease)
Internal hemorrhoids originate above the dentate line(the boundary between the upper and lower anal canal) and may cause:
- rectal bleeding
- discomfort
- tissue prolapse from the anal canal
Internal hemorrhoid prolapse is classified as:
- grade I (into anal canal)
- grade II (beyond the anus with spontaneous reduction)
- grade III (requiring manual reduction)
- grade IV (irreducible)
External hemorrhoids, arising below the dentate line, cause rectal pain when engorged or thrombosed.
Management principles:
- initial treatment of all hemorrhoidal disease involves
- increasing intake of dietary fiber and water
- avoiding straining during defecation
- phlebotonics (eg, flavonoids [are believed to improve venous tone]) reduce bleeding, rectal pain, and swelling
- note though that symptom recurrence reaches 80% within 3 to 6 months after treatment cessation
- If dietary modification and phlebotonics are ineffective, grade I to grade III internal hemorrhoidal disease can be treated with outpatient-based interventions
- rubber band ligation resolves symptoms in 89% of patients, but repeated banding is needed in up to 20%
- sclerotherapy
- induces fibrosis with a sclerosant injection
- efficacious in the short term (weeks to months) among 70% to 85% of patients, but long-term remission occurs in only one-third of patients
- infrared coagulation
- uses heat to coagulate hemorrhoidal tissue
- results in 70% to 80% success in reducing bleeding and prolapse
- surgical procedures:
- excisional hemorrhoidectomy
- for disease unresponsive to outpatient-based therapy or for mixed hemorrhoidal disease
- achieves low recurrence (2%-10%), although with longer recovery (9-14 days)
- excisional hemorrhoidectomy
Notes:
- external hemorrhoidal disease
- rarely requires surgery unless acutely thrombosed
- outpatient clot evacuation within 72 hours of onset of a thrombosed external hemorrhoid is associated with decreased pain and reduced risk of repeat thrombosis
- patients presenting more than 72 hours after external hemorrhoid acute thrombosis should receive medical treatment (eg, stool softeners, oral and topical analgesics such as 5% lidocaine) (2)
Reference
- Acheson AG, Scholefield JH; Management of haemorrhoids. BMJ. 2008 Feb 16;336(7640):380-3.
- Ashburn JH. Hemorrhoidal Disease: A Review. JAMA. 2025;334(17):1541–1550.
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