痔疮病:综述。

IF 55 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Jean H Ashburn
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引用次数: 0

摘要

重要性:痔疮病,肛管组织衬里的病理,影响了大约1000万人在美国。痔疮疾病可能因出血、疼痛、肛门刺激和组织脱垂而影响生活质量。观察:痔疮分为内痔、外痔或混合性(并发内痔和外痔)。内痔起源于齿状线上方,即上肛管和下肛管之间的边界,可引起直肠出血、不适和肛管组织脱垂。内痔脱垂分为I级(进入肛管)、II级(超出肛门自行复位)、III级(需要人工复位)和IV级(不可复位)。在齿状线以下产生的外痔,当充血或形成血栓时,会引起直肠疼痛。所有痔疮疾病的初始治疗包括增加膳食纤维和水的摄入量,并避免排便时紧张。促静脉剂(如类黄酮[被认为可改善静脉张力])可减少出血、直肠疼痛和肿胀,但在停止治疗后3至6个月内症状复发率可达80%。如果饮食调整和静脉素注射无效,可采用办公室干预措施治疗1至3级内痔病。橡皮筋结扎术——在肛门镜检查时在痔疮组织底部缠上橡皮筋以限制血液流动——89%的患者症状得以缓解,但多达20%的患者需要反复绑扎。硬化疗法通过注射硬化剂诱导纤维化,在70%至85%的患者中短期(数周至数月)有效,但只有三分之一的患者出现长期缓解。红外线凝血使用热量凝固痔疮组织,减少出血和脱垂的成功率为70%至80%。对于对诊所治疗无反应的疾病或混合性痔疮疾病,切除痔疮切除术复发率低(2%-10%),但恢复时间较长(9-14天)。除非急性血栓形成,外痔病很少需要手术。在发生血栓形成的外痔72小时内进行门诊血块清除与疼痛减轻和再次血栓形成的风险降低有关。外痔急性血栓形成超过72小时的患者应接受药物治疗(如大便软化剂、口服和局部镇痛药,如5%利多卡因)。结论和相关性:痔疮疾病影响美国1000万人。一线治疗是增加纤维摄入量,排便时避免紧张和静脉素注射。在办公室橡皮筋结扎治疗I至III级内痔病是一线的程序治疗,尽管保守治疗的持续症状。对于III级至IV级脱垂、血栓形成或混合性痔疮疾病,微创方法不能改善的患者,推荐行切除痔切除术。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hemorrhoidal Disease: A Review.

Importance: Hemorrhoidal disease, pathology of the tissue lining of the anal canal, affects approximately 10 million individuals in the US. Hemorrhoidal disease may impair quality of life due to bleeding, pain, anal irritation, and tissue prolapse.

Observations: Hemorrhoids are classified as internal, external, or mixed (concurrent internal and external hemorrhoidal disease). Internal hemorrhoids originate above the dentate line, the boundary between the upper and lower anal canal, and may cause rectal bleeding, discomfort, and tissue prolapse from the anal canal. Internal hemorrhoid prolapse is classified as grade I (into anal canal), grade II (beyond the anus with spontaneous reduction), grade III (requiring manual reduction), and grade IV (irreducible). External hemorrhoids, arising below the dentate line, cause rectal pain when engorged or thrombosed. Initial treatment of all hemorrhoidal disease involves increasing intake of dietary fiber and water and avoiding straining during defecation. Phlebotonics (eg, flavonoids [thought to improve venous tone]) reduce bleeding, rectal pain, and swelling, although symptom recurrence reaches 80% within 3 to 6 months after treatment cessation. If dietary modification and phlebotonics are ineffective, grade I to grade III internal hemorrhoidal disease can be treated with office-based interventions. Rubber band ligation-placing a band around the base of hemorrhoid tissue during anoscopy to restrict blood flow-resolves symptoms in 89% of patients, but repeated banding is needed in up to 20%. Sclerotherapy, which induces fibrosis with a sclerosant injection, is efficacious in the short term (weeks to months) among 70% to 85% of patients, but long-term remission occurs in only one-third of patients. Infrared coagulation uses heat to coagulate hemorrhoidal tissue, yielding 70% to 80% success in reducing bleeding and prolapse. Excisional hemorrhoidectomy, for disease unresponsive to office-based therapy or for mixed hemorrhoidal disease, achieves low recurrence (2%-10%), although with longer recovery (9-14 days). External hemorrhoidal disease rarely requires surgery unless acutely thrombosed. Outpatient clot evacuation within 72 hours of onset of a thrombosed external hemorrhoid is associated with decreased pain and reduced risk of repeat thrombosis. Patients presenting more than 72 hours after external hemorrhoid acute thrombosis should receive medical treatment (eg, stool softeners, oral and topical analgesics such as 5% lidocaine).

Conclusions and relevance: Hemorrhoidal disease affects 10 million people in the US. First-line treatment is increased fiber intake, avoidance of straining during defecation, and phlebotonics. In-office rubber band ligation for grade I to III internal hemorrhoid disease is first-line procedural treatment for persistent symptoms despite conservative therapies. Excisional hemorrhoidectomy is recommended for grade III to IV prolapse, thrombosis, or mixed hemorrhoidal disease that does not improve with less invasive approaches.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
48.20
自引率
0.90%
发文量
1569
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association) is an international peer-reviewed general medical journal. It has been published continuously since 1883. JAMA is a member of the JAMA Network, which is a consortium of peer-reviewed general medical and specialty publications.
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