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Surgical Excision Versus Medical Treatment in Acute External Thrombosed Hemorrhoidal Disease
Acute external thrombosed hemorrhoidal disease (AETHH) is one of the emergent complications of hemorrhoidal disease that results in pain and loss of work force. Although surgical excision is recommended in the treatment of AETHH in the guidelines of the American Society of Colorectal Surgeons (ASCRS) and the European Society of Coloproctology (ESCP), the level of evidence is low and it is emphasized that additional studies are needed. Therefore, the investigators aimed to compare the efficacy of surgical excision with medical treatment in the treatment of AETHH.
Hemorrhoids are normal anatomical structures and are divided into internal and external according to the dentate line. External hemorrhoids distal to the dentate line, unlike internal hemorrhoids, are covered with squamous epithelium (anoderm), have somatic innervation, and are highly sensitive to pain. While internal hemorrhoidal disease causes symptoms such as painless bleeding, mucosal prolapse, soiling, and itching, external hemorrhoids do not cause clinical findings unless thrombosed. Acute constipation or excessive straining are held responsible for acute external thrombosed hemorrhoidal disease (AETHD). It appears as a painful, firm, purple-colored mass in the anoderm, and the main symptom is anal pain. The severity of pain increases in the first 24-48 hours after the formation of the thrombosed pack and reaches its peak. The pain is quite severe in the first 72-96 hours. Afterwards, with the resorption of the thrombosis, the severity of the pain decreases and the disease heals, leaving a skin tag behind. AETHD can be treated with surgical excision or conservative approaches. Conservative treatment includes a warm water sitz bath, analgesics, anti-inflammatory drugs. Also, phlebotonic drugs can be added. In the ASCRS and ESCP guidelines, early surgical excision is recommended for patients with acute external thrombosed hemorrhoidal disease in the first 72-96 hours (low quality evidence 2C). Guidelines highlight the lack of controlled studies of AETHD treatment . In this study, the investigators aimed to compare early surgical excision with conservative treatment in terms of pain control and recurrence in the treatment of AETHD.
Age
18 - 70 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Konya Training and Research Hospital
Konya, Turkey (Türkiye)
Start Date
July 1, 2022
Primary Completion Date
December 31, 2022
Completion Date
March 14, 2023
Last Updated
August 28, 2023
132
ACTUAL participants
Conservative treatment
PROCEDURE
Surgical Treatment
PROCEDURE
Lead Sponsor
Konya Meram State Hospital
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