Thrombotic external hemorrhoids

Thrombotic external hemorrhoids (external hemorrhiod) Thrombotic external hemorrhoids are clinically frequently-occurring. They are often caused by over-eating spicy food, dying from the toilet, rupturing the subanal vein around the anus, and stagnating the blood subcutaneously. Clinically, patients often feel conscious swelling of the anus, pain and foreign body sensation. Examination shows that there are grape-like dark purple tumors around the anus or under the skin of the anal canal. Everyone knows that there is a rich network of blood vessels in the human body, and the blood is constantly flowing to maintain the health of the human body. Once there is a problem with blood circulation in any place, the human body will have corresponding symptoms. Humans are upright walking animals with low anal positions (animals must not have thrombotic external hemorrhoids). Due to the effect of gravity, the blood vessels around the anus are subject to greater tension, coupled with sedentary conditions, weather changes, and eating spicy food, irregular life and old Physical deficiencies can cause poor circulation of blood vessels around the anus, blood stasis, and blood vessel flexion and expansion to form blood vessel masses. This blood vessel mass or mass is called hemorrhoids. Thrombotic external hemorrhoids, the Greek word for hemorrhoids, is a disease that is prone to bleeding. The narrow concept of hemorrhoids is the hemangioma formed by blood stasis, flexion and expansion of arteriovenous plexus in the lower rectum, anal canal and anus. These hemangiomas are soft and elastic. Inflammation, edema, or subcutaneous thrombosis of the skin around the anus, and even connective tissue ptosis or flaps are also included in the category of hemorrhoids. Hemorrhoids are normal parts of the human body and do not require diagnosis and treatment; they are considered to be a pathological condition only when they show symptoms or grow too large, that is, when hemorrhoids are diagnosed and treated. Among patients with thrombotic external hemorrhoids, 71.1% had symptoms, while 28.9% had no symptoms, indicating that asymptomatic hemorrhoids are present in large numbers. When we talk about hemorrhoids, we actually mean hemorrhoids, that is, those who have symptoms and cause harm and pain to the body.

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