Symptoms Of Hemroids – What 10 Million People Need To Know

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Statistics Can be Useful

A 2006 US study found the prevalence of hemroids to be 4.4%, i.e. 13 million afflicted in the estimated population of 298 million then. 1 million new cases occur every year. Yet, most people ignore the symptoms of hemroids resulting in relatively few seeing a doctor for medical treatment, with estimates ranging from 500,000 to 3 million per year. Amazingly, 10 million people ignore the symptoms! Granted the death toll from hemroids is very low, at less than 20 deaths per 100,000, but that is certainly no reason to be complacent.

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Firstly, the longer hemroids are left untreated, the longer it takes to heal. That it is possible for hemroids to be fully cured is another good reason to take action. Most importantly, confirming that it is hemroids rules out a variety of more serious ailments, some of which may be life-threatening whilst others require long-term professional care.

Life-threatening – Truth or Myth?

Symptoms of hemroids, especially blood in stool or bowel movement bleeding, can be very similar to a whole host of other medical conditions. It is no myth. Some of these conditions can lead to deadly consequences.

Broadly, these other ailments can be separated into 2 categories based on part of the body that they afflict, those that occur in the colon and those in the rectum. In the colon, the 7 main alternative causes are colorectal cancer, colon polyp, diverticulosis, ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease, intestinal ischemia and peptic ulcer. In the rectum, the 4 main alternative causes are proctitis, anorectal fistulae, anal fissures and rectal prolapse.

Severe life-threatening complications can arise from SOME of these other alternative causes. In this instance, following the majority of 10 million people in ignoring the symptoms of hemroids can have serious consequences. A simple rule, where there is persistent bleeding, see a doctor to establish the precise cause. If it is hemroids, the accompanying symptoms below should manifest as well.

Hemroids, Hemorrhoids, Haemorrhoids or Piles – One And The Same Symptoms

Mispelling (hemroid) and different spellings (US hemorrhoids, UK haemorrhoids) but they refer to the same, having been derived from the Greek word haimorrhoos which means flowing with blood. More colloquially known all over the world is the name piles, believed to be derived from the Latin word pila which means ball. “The common people call them piles, the aristocracy call them haemorrhoids, the French call them figs – what does it matter so long as you can cure them?” said Ardene, a 14th century English surgeon.

Before we touch on other symptoms of hemroids, we need to know the various medical terms that define a line marking the end of the rectum and the beginning of the anal canal. Known as the pectinate line or dentate line or anal verge or anorectal junction, this line distinguishes internal (rectum) and external (anal) hemroids. To the hemroid sufferer, the distinction of greater relevance is that above the line, verge or junction, there are relatively few pain nerve endings whilst there are an abundance right outside the boundary. Accordingly, internal hemroids are relatively painless but external hemroids can be very painful. This factor alone plays an important part when choices are made with regard to treatment, mainstream medicine or alternative remedies.

Symptoms Of Hemroids – Internal

Rectal bleeding, mentioned above as blood in stool or bowel movement bleeding, is the most common symptom of internal hemroids. Blood may coat the surface of stools, stain toilet tissue or dribble into the toilet bowl.

Another distinct symptom is the bulging movement of the internal hemroid during bowel motion. Medically, the extent of bulging leads to 4 classifications of protruding or prolapsed hemroids:

- A first-degree internal hemroid bulges into the anal canal
– A second-degree internal hemroid bulges from the anus, then retracts itself
– A third-degree hemroid bulges from the anus and must be physically pushed back in
– A fourth-degree hemroid bulges out from the anus permanently.

Internal hemroids are typically not painful as they occur above the pectinate line but large ones that protrude from the anus may be be squeezed by the anal sphincter muscles. In the extreme, they become strangulated hemroids (deprived of blood supply) that require emergency medical treatment as the surrounding tissue may be endangered.

Other symptoms of internal hemroids include itchiness, skin irritation, anal lumps, rectal lumps and the uncomfortable urge to pass stools right after bowel motion. The feeling of uncompleted defecation is enhanced in cases where the hemorrhoid is very large and near the anal opening.

Symptoms Of Hemroids – External

Rectal pain is the distinguishing feature between internal and external hemroids as the latter is sited outside the pectinate line where there are many pain nerve receptors.

External hemroids are prone to thrombosis, that is the formation of a clot or thrombus inside a blood vessel, which obstructs the flow of blood through the circulatory system. This thrombosed hemroid can cause damaging inflammation in the whole anal and rectal regions.

Unlike internal hemroids which can sometimes go undetected due to the lack of obvious symptoms, external hemroids can cause constant irritation or discomfort. Cleaning the anal region is understandable but doing this excessively only aggravates the hemroid leading to a vicious recurring cycle.

In The 10 Million Ignoring The Symptoms Of Hemroids?

Are you in the 10 million? Recognition of a problem is the first step to its solution. So it is with hemroids. On occasion, it can be serious and warrants medical attention. But more frequently, the treatment is fairly straightforward. Apart from mainstream medicine talked about on thie site, there are also alternative solutions like the featured H Miracle that promises a natural and permanent solution.

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