## Abstract Eighty patients with prolapsing haemorrhoids, randomly treated by either rubber band ligation (n = 39) or haemorrhoidectomy (n = 41), were assessed 12 and 42 months after treatment. Thirty-eight patients in each group presented with rectal bleeding. Twelve months later, 36 in the rubber
Comparison of rubber band ligation and haemorrhoidectomy for second- and third-degree haemorrhoids: A prospective clinical trial
โ Scribed by John A. Murie; Iain MacKenzie; Andrew J. W. Sim
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 291 KB
- Volume
- 67
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0007-1323
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Summary
One hundred patients with second- or third-degree haemorrhoids were randomly allocated to haemorrhoidectomy (50) or rubber band ligation (50). Forty-two in each group presented with rectal bleeding; haemorrhoidectomy relieved 36 and rubber band ligation relieved 31 of this symptom. All patients had prolapsing haemorrhoids at presentation. One year after treatment 45 haemorrhoidectomy and 43 rubber band ligation patients were assessed. Haemorrhoidectomy relieved 44 of 45 patients and rubber band ligation relieved 34 of 43 (P < 0ยท05). Haemorrhoidectomy caused pain in all cases, lasting for more than 48 h in 35. Rubber band ligation was painless in 5 and produced pain for more than 48 h in 15. Mean time off work was 32 days for haemorrhoidectomy and 3 days for rubber band ligation (P < 0ยท001).
Rubber band ligation as an outpatient procedure is an effective treatment for second- and third-degree haemorrhoids and should be considered before recourse to surgery.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Summary A prospective randomized trial has compared rubber band ligation with phenol injection in 82 patients with symptomatic haemorrhoids. The symptomatic results in all patients 12 months after treatment were indistinguishable, 64 per cent being improved after rubber band ligation, compared w