First degree
Second degree
Third degree
Fourth degree
Findings
Bulge into the lumen of the anal canal ± painless bleeding
Protrude at the time of a bowel movement and reduce spontaneously
Protrude spontaneously or with bowel movement, require manual reduction
Permanently prolapsed and irreducible
Symptoms
Painless bleeding
Painless bleeding
Anal mass with defecation
Anal burning or pruritus
Painless bleeding
Anal mass with defecation
Feeling of incomplete evacuation
Mucous leakage
Fecal leakage
Perianal burning or pruritus ani
Difficulty with perianal hygiene
Painless or painful bleeding
Irreducible anal mass
Feeling of incomplete evacuation
Mucous leakage
Fecal leakage
Perianal burning or pruritus ani
Difficulty with perianal hygiene
Signs
Bright red bleeding Bleeding at the end of defecation
Blood drips or squirts into toilet
Bleeding may be occult
Bright red bleeding
Prolapse with defecation
Bright red bleeding
Blood drips or squirts into toilet
Prolapsed hemorrhoids reduce manually
Perianal stool or mucous
Anemia extremely rare
Bright red bleeding
Blood drips or squirts into toilet
Prolapsed hemorrhoids always out
Perianal stool or mucous
Anemia extremely rare
Figure 29.1
Third degree hemorrhoids. This patient has been placed in high lithotomy position for examination and treatment
The treatment of hemorrhoids is centered on relief of symptoms. Operations to improve appearance of the anus may lead to complications that are worse than the initial presentation such as incontinence, fistula formation, or anal stenosis. Many symptomatic hemorrhoids are managed successfully by medical therapy. This includes dietary fiber supplements, stool softeners, increased fluid intake, and avoidance of straining. A Cochrane review demonstrated that fiber supplementation reduces overall symptoms from hemorrhoids by 53 % in patients with grades 1–3 hemorrhoids. The authors also demonstrated that this effect is durable over time, making medical management of mildly symptomatic hemorrhoids a viable treatment strategy [5].
Hemorrhoids may occasionally present in an emergent situation. Acutely thrombosed external hemorrhoids are exquisitely painful and present as a hard prolapsed hemorrhoid with surrounding erythema. Simple evacuation results in a high rate of future symptoms; therefore, these patients are best treated by excision of the thrombosed hemorrhoid. Thrombosis of internal hemorrhoids is less common and may not require surgical intervention, but excisional hemorrhoidectomy is called for if surgical treatment is necessary [3]. Additionally, strangulated hemorrhoids are not only thrombosed, but infarcted and can be infected. Closed hemorrhoidectomy may cause sepsis in these patients and open hemorrhoidectomy should be pursued [6].
Perioperative Care
Preoperative Preparation
Patients may undergo hemorrhoidal operations in the outpatient clinic, day surgery suite, or inpatient operating room. The preoperative care will vary slightly, but will generally have the same components. Full medical evaluation should be performed to ensure safety of anesthesia. A preoperative bowel prep is usually prescribed and may range from an enema or suppository to evacuate the rectum to a more complete prep with one or two doses of magnesium citrate followed by enemas the evening prior to and morning of the operation. All patients undergoing procedures in the operating room should not eat of drink anything after midnight. Antibiotics are administered prior to incision and should generally be targeted toward the normal colonic flora.
Positioning and Anesthesia
The patient may be placed in the lateral decubitus, jackknife, or high lithotomy position. Office procedures under local anesthetics are best served by the decubitus or jackknife approach, while either jackknife or high lithotomy may be used in the operating room. In the jackknife position, care needs to be taken to avoid pressure on facial structures. In high lithotomy, the patient’s heels are placed in soft stirrups. Care should be taken to avoid pressure on the heels and calves. Choice of anesthesia involves extent of the planned procedure, patient anxiety and pain, likelihood of additional pathology, anesthetic risk, and patient preference. Local anesthesia alone may be used for simple procedures, but conscious sedation, spinal anesthesia, or general anesthesia with laryngeal mask or endotracheal tube may be needed for more complicated hemorrhoid treatment. In general, deep anesthesia is preferred when performing operations in the anal canal. This prevents the patient from straining against the anal speculum and traumatizing the sphincter mechanism. Preparation of the anus and perianal region should be performed with a full betadine scrub.
Description of the Procedure
Sclerosis
Injection of a sclerosing agent may be used to treat first, second and third degree hemorrhoids. One to five ml of sclerosing agent (5 % phenol in oil, ethanolamine, quinine urea, hypertonic saline, or aluminum potassium sulfate with tannic acid [ALTA]) is injected into the submucosa of each hemorrhoid [7]. The resultant ulceration and scarring prevent prolapse. Care should be taken in the anterior direction to inject superficially. The prostate or periprostatic venous plexus may be injured with deep injection [2, 6].
Infrared or Laser Photocoagulation
Either through an endoscope or using an anoscope, the tip of a fiberoptic probe is placed at the tip of the hemorrhoidal pedicle and infrared radiation is used to coagulate the underlying vascular plexus. This treatment is only suited for first and minor second degree hemorrhoids [2, 6, 7].
Doppler-guided laser photocoagulation (Hemorrhoid Laser Procedure, or HeLP) is a newer system of more targeted photocoagulation. Doppler ultrasound is used to identify the branches of the superior hemorrhoidal artery feeding into the hemorrhoidal plexuses about 3 cm above the dentate line, and a laser system is then used to coagulate the vascular supply. A small randomized controlled trial between HeLP and rubber band ligation demonstrated better postoperative pain control and more frequent resolution of symptoms at 6 months with HeLP as well as improved patient satisfaction [8]. Long-term follow up of this method is still needed [7].
Rubber-Band Ligation
Rubber-band ligation is best suited for first, second, and few third degree hemorrhoids. A Cochrane review comparing rubber band ligation to excisional hemorrhoidectomy concluded that this should be the initial treatment of choice for symptomatic grade 2 hemorrhoids, although higher-grade hemorrhoids respond better to surgical excision [9]. Rubber-band ligation involves the application of a rubber band to the mucosa above the hemorrhoidal tissue and 1–2 cm above the dentate line to include the feeding vessel of the hemorrhoid within the band. This causes necrosis of the captured tissue, ulceration and scarring, which prevents prolapse or bleeding. A slotted anoscope or anal speculum is inserted the hemorrhoidal tissue is allowed to protrude into the slot. Rubber-bands may be applied by a suction or non-suction device. The mucosa just above the hemorrhoidal cushion is either grasped with a clamp or suctioned into the tip of the banding device. The pre-loaded band is then deployed by squeezing the trigger on the device. The band must be employed above the dentate line to ensure that no sensate mucosa is included. Immediate and postoperative pain are indications of inclusion of this mucosa and removal of the bands may be necessary [2, 6].