What to choose for minimally invasive treatment of hemorrhoids

In the usual outpatient clinic, patients often ask whether your hospital can do minimally invasive hemorrhoid surgery. What exactly is considered minimally invasive hemorrhoid treatment? The purpose of hemorrhoid treatment is to solve the bleeding and prolapse symptoms caused by hemorrhoids, so there is no cure for hemorrhoids, as long as the treatment can solve the symptoms of hemorrhoids is the best treatment method. Generally speaking, about 80% of hemorrhoids can be relieved through the use of medication, and only about 20% require surgical intervention. Common minimally invasive surgical treatments include internal hemorrhoid injections, rubber band ligation, and hemorrhoidal artery ligation, which can be done on an outpatient basis under local anesthesia. Most of the patients said minimally invasive surgery refers to hemorrhoids PPH surgery or TST surgery, in fact, PPH surgery from the beginning of the design and minimally invasive has nothing to do with the design of this surgery is designed to solve the problem of postoperative pain hemorrhoids surgery, I do not know when in the country is said to be minimally invasive surgery; in fact, PPH surgery is not only not minimally invasive surgery, in fact, the trauma is also relatively large, and can occur more serious complications such as rectovaginal leakage, pelvic infections, persistent complications such as rectovaginal leakage, pelvic infections, and other complications. The procedure is not only minimally invasive, it is also more invasive and can have more serious complications such as rectovaginal leakage, pelvic infection, persistent anal pain, and a higher rate of long-term recurrence! Therefore, it is important to be aware of the possible complications of PPH before undergoing the procedure.