Anal Fissure Diagnosis and Treatment

Trauma or injury can stretch the anal canal and create a tear in the lining of the anus. These tears, known as anal fissures, usually come from passing large or hard stools. They can cause pain and bleeding during and after bowel movements.

Diagnosing Anal Fissures

You can easily mistake these symptoms as signs of other conditions, such as hemorrhoids.

You might not be comfortable telling these problems to a doctor, but it's important to do so. That way, they can rule out more serious conditions.

What to Tell Your Doctor

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In most cases, discussing your symptoms can give your doctor enough information to diagnose an anal fissure. Be sure to tell them:

  • When you have pain, burning, or itching
  • How bad your discomfort is
  • How long the pain and discomfort usually lasts
  • What type of bleeding you've seen
  • What, if anything, improves your symptoms

Your doctor may ask about your diet, your bowel habits, and if you have any other medical conditions or intestinal problems.

Exam

Even though your doctor can usually diagnose an anal fissure from the symptoms you tell them, the best way to learn whether you have one is through a physical exam. Your doctor may look at the area for a fissure.

You probably won't need a rectal exam (when the doctor uses a gloved finger to feel inside the anus) or an anoscopy (when the doctor puts a lighted scope into the anal canal). Sometimes they're necessary, though.

Further Testing

Generally, a visual exam of the area is all it takes. But if your doctor thinks an inflammatory bowel disease has led to the anal fissure, you might need more tests. Often, the number and location of anal fissures can point to other conditions, like Crohn’s disease. The presence of a skin tag at one end of a fissure may also point to chronic anal fissures.

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Your doctor might also suggest a test called a sigmoidoscopy to see the lower part of the colon, or the sigmoid colon. Or you may need a colonoscopy to look at the whole large intestine. Both tests involve inserting a long, thin, flexible, lighted tube into your anus to view the colon. They're used to look for abnormal growths or inflammatory conditions.

Questions to Ask Your Doctor

Once your doctor diagnoses an anal fissure, ask them these important questions:

  • Can I expect this fissure to heal on its own?
  • How can I treat an anal fissure at home?
  • Do I need medication?
  • Do I need to make changes to my diet?
  • How long should it take for the fissure to heal?
  • Am I likely to get more anal fissures?
  • Will I need surgery? What are the risks of surgery?

Treating Anal Fissures

The goal of treatment is to relieve pain and discomfort, and heal the torn lining. Acute anal fissures -- the ones that don't last longer than 6 weeks -- are common and usually heal on their own with self-care. Chronic anal fissures -- those that last longer than 6 weeks -- may need medicine or surgery to help them heal.

Self-Care

If your fissures are caused by constipation or diarrhea, you can change a few habits to help lessen the strain on the anal canal. These steps can help relieve symptoms and encourage healing in most cases.

  • Wheat bran
  • Oat bran
  • Whole grains, including brown rice, oatmeal, and whole-grain pastas, cereals, and breads
  • Peas and beans
  • Citrus fruits
  • Prunes and prune juice

These habits are usually enough to heal most anal fissures within a few weeks to a few months. But when they aren't enough, ask your doctor about other treatments.

Surgery

You probably won't need surgery for anal fissures unless other forms of treatment haven't worked. The surgery, called a lateral internal sphincterotomy (LIS), involves making a small cut in the anal sphincter muscle. It reduces pain and pressure, allowing the fissure to heal.

The pain from this surgery is usually mild. It hurts less than the fissure itself. The surgery might be followed by a temporary inability to control gas, mild fecal leakage, or infection. But in most cases, complete healing of fissures takes place within 8 weeks after surgery.

Read more on: digestive disorders