Rethinking What We Know About Hemorrhoids

Robert S Sandler, Anne F Peery, Robert S Sandler, Anne F Peery

Abstract

Although hemorrhoids are responsible for considerable economic cost and personal suffering, they have received surprisingly little research attention. In the United States, hemorrhoids are the third most common outpatient gastrointestinal diagnosis with nearly 4 million office and emergency department visits annually. The etiology of hemorrhoids is speculative. A low-fiber diet and constipation have historically been thought to increase the risk for hemorrhoids, but not proven. Symptoms commonly attributed to hemorrhoids include bleeding, pain, pruritus, fecal seepage, prolapse, and mucus discharge. Research has found that these symptoms were equally reported by patients with and without hemorrhoids. Medical therapies for hemorrhoids have not been formally studied except for fiber where the results have been inconsistent. A number of office-based interventions such as rubber band ligation and infrared coagulation are widely used and economically favorable for practitioners. Surgical procedures are effective at eliminating hemorrhoids but may be painful. Given the burden of disease and numerous gaps in our understanding, the time has come for targeted research to understand the cause, symptoms, and best treatment for patients with symptomatic hemorrhoids.

Keywords: Hemorrhoids; Patient-Reported Outcome; Prevalence; Review.

Conflict of interest statement

Disclosures: there are no conflicts of interest

Copyright © 2019 AGA Institute. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Anorectum with internal and external hemorrhoids.

Source: PubMed

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