Chronic Hemorrhoids

HEMORRHOID SYMPTOMS & VEIN CARE

Chronic hemorrhoids can cause recurring rectal bleeding, swelling, irritation, pain, or prolapse that keeps returning over time. Persistent or worsening symptoms should be evaluated to confirm the cause and guide treatment planning.

Evaluation & Next Steps

Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm

Quick Summary

Key takeaway: Chronic hemorrhoids are enlarged or irritated rectal or anal veins that keep causing symptoms over time, including bleeding, swelling, pain, irritation, or prolapse.

Evaluation focuses on confirming that hemorrhoids are the source of symptoms, assessing severity, reviewing bowel habits and bleeding patterns, and determining whether conservative care or additional treatment planning is appropriate.

Overview

What are Chronic Hemorrhoids?

Hemorrhoids are swollen veins in the lower rectum or around the anus. They may be internal, external, or both. When symptoms keep returning or do not improve with basic care, they are often described as chronic or recurrent.

Why Evaluation Matters

Rectal bleeding, pain, swelling, and prolapse can have more than one cause. Evaluation helps confirm whether symptoms are hemorrhoid-related, identify severity, and determine whether conservative measures, procedural options, or additional workup should be considered.

Symptoms

Symptoms vary depending on whether hemorrhoids are internal, external, prolapsing, irritated, or thrombosed. Some symptoms are mild and intermittent, while others keep returning or interfere with daily comfort.

Rectal Bleeding

Bright red bleeding may occur during or after bowel movements, especially with straining or irritated internal hemorrhoids.

Swelling or Prolapse

Hemorrhoid tissue may swell, bulge, or protrude outward, sometimes causing pressure, hygiene problems, or discomfort.

Pain, Itching, or Irritation

External hemorrhoids or irritated tissue may cause soreness, itching, tenderness, burning, or discomfort with sitting.

Recurring Flare-Ups

Symptoms may improve temporarily but return repeatedly when pressure, straining, constipation, or bowel-pattern problems persist.

Seek care now if…

Seek prompt evaluation if bleeding is heavy, pain becomes severe, a lump becomes suddenly swollen and very tender, symptoms occur with fever or major weakness, or rectal bleeding is new, persistent, or worsening.

Causes & Risk Factors

Chronic hemorrhoids usually develop from repeated pressure on veins in the lower rectum and anal canal. Bowel habits, tissue support, and repeated irritation can all contribute.

Common Causes

Not every flare-up has the same trigger. Identifying bowel-pattern problems and symptom patterns can help guide a realistic care plan.

Risk Factors

Diagnosis

Diagnosis focuses on confirming whether hemorrhoids are causing the symptoms, determining whether they are internal, external, or prolapsing, and assessing bleeding, pain, swelling, and recurrence.

Typical Evaluation

What to Bring

Treatment Options

Treatment depends on symptom severity, bleeding pattern, prolapse, pain, recurrence, and whether conservative care has provided enough relief.

Related care: Treatment planning may include bowel-habit changes, symptom control, procedural discussion, or image-guided evaluation when appropriate.

Risk Management

Monitoring & Symptom Protection

Minimally Invasive Options

Follow-Up Evaluation

Recovery

Recovery and symptom control depend on hemorrhoid severity, bowel habits, pressure reduction, and the treatment approach used. Some patients improve with conservative care, while persistent symptoms may need closer follow-up.

What Helps Most

  • Reduce straining: Avoid prolonged pushing during bowel movements.
  • Improve stool consistency: Fiber and hydration may help reduce irritation.
  • Follow care guidance: Use recommended treatments consistently.
  • Monitor bleeding: Track whether bleeding improves or returns.
  • Keep follow-up: Persistent symptoms should be reassessed.

When to Follow Up

  • Bleeding persists: Ongoing or worsening bleeding needs evaluation.
  • Pain increases: Severe or recurring pain should be reviewed.
  • Prolapse worsens: Tissue bulging may need treatment planning.
  • Symptoms affect comfort: Sitting, hygiene, or bowel movements are disrupted.
  • Diagnosis is uncertain: New or changing rectal symptoms should be checked.

Frequently Asked Questions

Chronic hemorrhoids are enlarged or irritated rectal or anal veins that keep causing symptoms over time, such as bleeding, swelling, irritation, pain, or prolapse.

Yes. Hemorrhoids can cause bright red rectal bleeding, especially during or after bowel movements. Persistent, heavy, or new bleeding should be evaluated.

A prolapsing hemorrhoid extends outward from the anal canal. It may cause pressure, swelling, irritation, hygiene problems, or discomfort.

No. Some improve with conservative care and bowel-habit changes, but persistent bleeding, prolapse, or pain may require additional treatment planning.

They often recur when straining, constipation, diarrhea, prolonged toilet sitting, or repeated pressure on rectal veins continues over time.

Seek evaluation if symptoms keep returning, bleeding persists, prolapse worsens, pain becomes significant, or the diagnosis is unclear.

Locations

LVVIS offers vein evaluation and treatment planning at multiple Las Vegas locations. Choose the office that is most convenient when scheduling your visit.

LVVIS West Side Consultation Office

8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Consultations and vascular evaluations

LV2 Limb & Vascular Division

8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care

LVVIS East Procedure Office

2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119

Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care

LVVIS West Side Surgical Center

6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Advanced vascular and interventional procedures