In clinical work, patients often ask about the treatment of hemorrhoids, the most mentioned is whether it can be “cured”? There is no doubt that among many anorectal diseases, hemorrhoids are “renowned” in the medical community for their high incidence, painfulness, and serious health effects. Most patients require surgical treatment to cure them. Many patients, after several treatments, ask the question, “Is there no effective “cure” for hemorrhoids today, given the rapid development of medicine? To answer this question, we need to first identify the cause of hemorrhoids. The etiology of hemorrhoids has been debated for hundreds of years, but no consensus has been reached. We found that the following three phenomena are common in most recurring patients: 1. Patient’s own factors: After hemorrhoid surgery, they mistakenly think that they are done, and they do not care about their diet and bowel habits, leading to recurrence; 2. Medical factors: Many patients think that hemorrhoid surgery is a minor operation, and they seek treatment at random and nearby, leading to recurrence. In addition, due to the academic bias of the anorectal specialist, most clinicians rarely dabble in the treatment of inexperience and improper choice of treatment methods, resulting in recurrence; 3, genetic factors: a few patients are born with weak blood vessel walls, few elastic fibers, and poor vascular resistance to internal and external pressure, also prone to the formation of stubborn hemorrhoid disease. In addition, there are some patients who reappear with hemorrhoid symptoms after surgery, and the site where they occur is no longer in the original location, which does not belong to the category of recurrence.