Haemorrhoids Flashcards

1
Q

def

A

anal vascular cushions (which contribute to anal closure) become enlarged + engorged with a tendency to protrude, bleed, prolaspse into the anal canal

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2
Q

classifications of haemorrhoids

A

classified by location
-internal (from superior haemorrhoidal plexus + lie above the dentate line)
-external (from inferior haemorrhoidal plexus + lie below the dentate line)
classified by degree of prolapse
-first degree: do no prolapse
-second degree: prolapse with defaecation but reduce spontaneously)
-third degree: prolapse + require manual reduction
-fourth degree: prolapse + not reversible

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3
Q

aetiology

A
1 associations/risk factors
-constipation
-prolonged straining
-pregnancy
-portal HTN
2 pathogenesis
-excessive straining causes engorgement of anal cushions
-plus hard stools
-causes disruption of tissue organisation, hypertrophy, fragmentation of muscle + elastin fibres + downward displacement
-raised resting anal pressures
-bleeding from pre-sinusoidal arterioles
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4
Q

epi

A

common
45-65yrs
disease of developed world

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5
Q

history

A
commonly asymptomatic
1 bleeding
-bright red blood on toilet paper or dripping into pan after passage of stool
-blood never mixed in with stool
2 absent alarm symptoms
-weight loss
-change in bowel habit
-meleana
3 itching
4 anal lumps
5 severe pain in thrombosed external haemorrhoids
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6
Q

examination

A

first/second degree haemorrhoids not usually apparent on external inspection
uncomplicated haemorrhoids are seen on protoscopy as red granular mucosal swellings, they bulge on straining

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7
Q

what are the differential diagnoses for haemorrhoids

A
anal tags
anal fissure
rectal prolapse
polyps
tumour
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8
Q

investigations

A

sigmoidoscopy to exclude a rectal source of bleeding as haemorrhoids are common and can coexist with colorectal tumours

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9
Q

management

A
conservative
-high fibre diet
-increase fluid intake
-bulk laxatives
-topical creams
local therapy (for first/second degree)
-injection sclerotherapy
-banding
surgical
-for symptomatic 3rd + 4th degree haemorrhoids
-milligan-morgan open haemorrhoidectomy
-stapled haemorroidectomy
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10
Q

what topical creams are used for haemorrhoids

A

contain mild astringents (reduces bleeding) + local anaethetic

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11
Q

what is injection sclerotherapy

A

5% phenol in almond oil is injected above the dentate (no sensory fibres) line into the submucosa above a haemorrhoid
induces inflammation + subsequent fibrosis causing mucosal fixation

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12
Q

what is banding

A

barron’s bands are applied proximal to the haemorrhoid incorporating tissue which falls away after a couple of days
leaves a small ulcer to heal by secondary intention

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13
Q

complications

A

1 bleeding
2 prolapse
3 thrombosis

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14
Q

prognosis

A

often a chronic problem
recurrence of symptoms
surgery can provide long-term relief for severe symptoms

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