The treatment of piles depends on the severity and the type of symptoms affecting the patient.
Simple preventive measures include having a balanced diet and adequate water intake to allow regular bowel movement without straining. If this does not help, other treatments available include:
These can be used to treat small bleeding piles.
This rubber band treatment works effectively on internal haemorrhoids that protrude with bowel movements. A small rubber band is placed over the haemorrhoid, cutting off its blood supply. The haemorrhoid and the band fall off in a few days and the wound usually heals in a week or two. This procedure sometimes produces mild discomfort and bleeding.
For this procedure, the doctor injects a chemical solution into the haemorrhoid, causing it to shrivel and subsequently fall off. This method is relatively painless and can also be used on bleeding haemorrhoids that don't protrude.
Piles that are not prolapsed can be ligated or injected. These are simple procedures that can be done in an outpatient clinic and do not require hospitalisation. But these procedures may not be extremely effective, and may require more than one treatment.
More definitive measures are needed for severe cases, such as when clots repeatedly form in external haemorrhoids, or Iigation fails to treat internal haemorrhoids, or when a protruding haemorrhoid cannot be reduced, or when there is persistent bleeding.
Surgical techniques under general anaesthesia include:
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