Must hemorrhoids be treated?

An important principle in the treatment of hemorrhoids is that asymptomatic hemorrhoids do not require treatment. For symptomatic hemorrhoids (such as bleeding, prolapse, pain and other symptoms) delayed treatment, can only aggravate their own pain and the development of the disease. Bleeding hemorrhoids will appear anal pain, in fact, bleeding hemorrhoids mostly for the internal hemorrhoids broken caused by the internal hemorrhoids where the mucous membrane of the rectum is dominated by vegetative nerves, sensory retardation, so hemorrhoidal bleeding is mostly not pain. There are things that come out of the anus is hemorrhoids, in addition to hemorrhoids, many anorectal diseases can appear in the anus with prolapse, such as anal papillae hypertrophy, rectal prolapse, rectal polyps, etc.. Hemorrhoids good recurrence, surgery is useless, theoretically speaking, hemorrhoids after surgery has a chance of recurrence, but after surgery, if the maintenance is proper (good living habits, dietary habits, defecation habits, etc.), it can significantly reduce the recurrence rate. Hemorrhoids need to be cured, internal hemorrhoids are caused by lesions in the anal cushion. When the anal cushion is congested or the supporting tissues are loose and fractured, it will cause bleeding and prolapse of internal hemorrhoids. Because the anal cushion has the function of restraining and controlling the bowel movement, the traditional hemorrhoidectomy often removes too much internal hemorrhoids will destroy the normal physiological function of the anal cushion, which may cause anal leakage of fecal matter, leakage of gas, leakage of liquid and anal stenosis and other complications. Therefore, the purpose of the current surgical treatment is to restore the normal anatomical position and function of the anal cushion, rather than removing the diseased anal cushion (internal hemorrhoids), so internal hemorrhoids do not require radical resection (i.e., complete excision). Hemorrhoids will be cancerous, this statement makes some hemorrhoid patients worried. In fact, there is no evidence in modern medicine that hemorrhoids are cancerous. It should be noted that hemorrhoids do not become cancerous, but it is common in clinical practice to see some hemorrhoidal patients with anorectal cancer.