This is one of the biggest concerns and worries of the majority of hemorrhoid patients, hemorrhoid surgery is not strictly speaking recurring, because the anal skin mucosa is not regenerative after removal, the anal skin mucosa is not after removal is replaced by scar connective tissue, many old hemorrhoid patients will ask: I 1 year, 2 years ago, 5 years ago, 10 years ago, or 20 years ago, one or more times to perform hemorrhoid surgery treatment Why did the hemorrhoids grow back soon? Answer: It turns out that the prognosis after hemorrhoid surgery is closely related to the surgical method of hemorrhoids and the amount of tissue removed; most of the current hemorrhoid surgeries are segmented to remove pathological hemorrhoid tissue, preserving enough tissue (skin bridge, mucosal bridge) to prevent complications such as anal stenosis. We often encounter a situation in the clinic where the original surgically removed area does not commit hemorrhoids, but the preserved tissue (skin bridge, mucosal bridge) commits hemorrhoids; what is going on? It turns out that the tissues preserved during surgery (skin bridge, mucosal bridge) are the same as the removed hemorrhoid tissues in terms of tissue source, blood supply, and innervation, so if the tissues at the original removed site can get hemorrhoids, then the tissues at the unremoved site can also get hemorrhoids (just like when you go to buy a lottery ticket, A can win the lottery, B can also win the lottery, and D of course also has a chance to win the lottery, the same chance), so other If the hemorrhoid grows back in another location, it is not called a recurrence, but a regrowth or re-growth of the hemorrhoid. (For example, in the 1970s and 1980s, the surgeon of a severe mixed cricoid hemorrhoid used to perform a complete circumcision of the entire hemorrhoid, and the result was that the hemorrhoid was never committed, but there were too many complications, long-term rectal mucosal ectasia bleeding, loss of anal canal skin mucosa, poor anal closure, etc.). So it is said that hemorrhoids do not recur after surgery! The actual hemorrhoids are not absolutely cured, but relatively cured! The actual surgery is a good combination of good eating habits, living habits, and bowel habits that can generally be maintained for 10-20 years, 30-40 years for those who are well maintained, and there are many examples of people who don’t commit for the rest of their lives.