Piles affect nearly 10 million Indians every year. Most can be treated without major surgery. Understand your grade, your options, and the right next step — without guesswork or embarrassment.
Piles (haemorrhoids) are swollen blood vessels inside or around the rectum and anus. They are extremely common — and very treatable.
Blood vessels and tissue at the end of your rectum and around the anus have become swollen and inflamed. This happens when pressure builds up in the lower abdomen — from straining, constipation, prolonged sitting, or a low-fibre diet.
Internal piles form inside the rectum — you may not see them but may notice bleeding or a feeling of incomplete emptying. External piles form under the skin around the anus and are more likely to cause pain, itching, or a visible lump.
Mild piles can resolve with diet changes and medications. But once piles enlarge or prolapse, they tend to worsen over time — especially without changes to diet and bowel habits. Grade 3 and 4 piles almost always require a procedure.
Treatment ranges from dietary changes and creams for mild cases, to banding and sclerotherapy for Grade 1–2, to laser, stapler, or open surgery for Grade 3–4. The right treatment depends entirely on your grade and symptoms.
Piles are classified into four grades based on how much they prolapse. Your grade determines your treatment.
Piles remain inside the rectum. You may notice bright red blood on tissue or in the bowl. No visible bulge. Itching or discomfort possible.
Piles prolapse during straining but return inside on their own. Bleeding, itching, and a feeling of incomplete emptying are common.
Piles prolapse and stay outside unless manually pushed back in. Significant discomfort, pain, and bleeding. Procedure almost always needed.
Piles are permanently prolapsed and cannot be reduced. Often painful, may bleed heavily. Surgery is the standard treatment.
Most piles are not an emergency. But a few symptoms need prompt medical attention.
Answer 5 short questions. We will indicate your likely grade and what treatment path makes sense for you.
Takes about 90 seconds · Not a diagnosis
This is not a clinical diagnosis. A physical examination is needed to confirm your grade.
This is not a clinical diagnosis. A physical examination is needed to confirm your grade.
This is not a clinical diagnosis. A physical examination is needed to confirm urgency.
No guesswork. This is the step-by-step process most patients follow from first contact to full recovery.
A care coordinator understands your symptoms, helps you identify your likely grade, and matches you to the right specialist — proctologist or colorectal surgeon — based on your condition and location.
Your specialist performs a proctoscopy or digital rectal examination to confirm the grade, check for internal vs external piles, and rule out other causes. Treatment options are explained clearly.
Blood tests, anaesthesia fitness, and insurance pre-authorization are handled. You receive a clear list: what to eat, what to avoid, and how to prepare your bowel the night before.
Most procedures are performed under spinal or general anaesthesia. Laser and stapler procedures are day-care — you are usually home within 4–6 hours. Open hemorrhoidectomy may require one overnight stay.
Your coordinator guides you through sitz baths, diet, stool softeners, and activity restrictions. Your surgeon reviews you at 1 week. Most patients return to desk work within 5–7 days.
Treatment depends entirely on your grade. Your specialist will recommend the right approach after examination.
| Approach | Grade suited for | Procedure type | Recovery | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lifestyle & Medication Non-Surgical | Grade 1, mild Grade 2 | No procedure | Ongoing | High-fibre diet, stool softeners, topical creams, sitz baths. Effective for early-stage cases. |
| Rubber Band Ligation Clinic Procedure | Grade 1 and 2 | Outpatient, no anaesthesia | 2–3 weeks | A rubber band is placed around the base of the haemorrhoid, cutting off blood supply. It falls off within a week. |
| Sclerotherapy Clinic Procedure | Grade 1 and 2 | Outpatient, no anaesthesia | A few days | A chemical solution is injected into the haemorrhoid, causing it to shrink. Quick and well-tolerated. |
| Laser Hemorrhoidoplasty Minimally Invasive | Grade 2 and 3 | Day-care, local or general anaesthesia | 2–3 weeks | Laser energy shrinks haemorrhoidal tissue with precision. Less pain, minimal bleeding, faster return to routine. |
| Stapled Hemorrhoidopexy (PPH) Most Common Surgical | Grade 3 (and some Grade 2) | Day-care, spinal or general anaesthesia | 1–2 weeks | A circular stapler pulls prolapsed tissue back into position and cuts off blood supply. Less post-op pain than open surgery. |
| Open Hemorrhoidectomy | Grade 3 and 4, complex cases | Day-care or 1-night stay | 3–6 weeks | Complete surgical removal of haemorrhoidal tissue. Highest success rate (~95%). Recommended for severe or recurring cases. |
Costs vary by procedure type, grade, and hospital. Here are realistic ranges to help you plan ahead.
For Grade 2–3. Day-care procedure. Cost includes surgeon, anaesthesia, and facility. Laser equipment adds to cost but reduces recovery time.
For Grade 2–3. Day-care. Stapler device cost is included. Lower post-op pain compared to open surgery.
For Grade 3–4 and complex cases. May require a 1-night stay. Highest long-term success rate.
Most patients searching for a "piles doctor" do not know what criteria actually matter. Here is what does.
Specialists who perform piles procedures regularly — not occasionally — have significantly better outcomes and complication rates. Ask how many cases per year.
The right specialist can offer banding, laser, stapler, and open surgery. You should not be pushed toward one option because it is the only one available.
Proctoscopy and anoscopy should be performed before any procedure to accurately grade and classify your condition. No procedure without examination.
Clear diet instructions, sitz bath protocol, stool softener plan, and scheduled follow-ups. Recovery from piles surgery is managed with routine — not guesswork.
Not every piles case needs surgery. Grade 1 and early Grade 2 cases should be offered non-surgical options first. A good specialist earns trust by not over-treating.
Recurrence after surgery depends heavily on technique and post-op lifestyle guidance. We verify outcomes and patient satisfaction before adding specialists to our network.
Piles procedures are among the most routinely performed in general surgery. But like any procedure, risks exist. You deserve to know them upfront.
A small amount of bleeding after bowel movements is common for 1–2 weeks. Heavy or prolonged bleeding should be reported to your surgeon immediately.
Piles can recur if diet and bowel habits do not change after treatment. Long-term recurrence is higher with banding than with surgery.
Post-operative pain is most intense in the first 2–3 days. Temporary difficulty in urination can occur, especially after spinal anaesthesia — usually resolves with sitz baths.
Uncommon when standard hygiene protocols are followed. Sitz baths 3–4 times a day are a key part of preventing wound infection post-surgery.
Tell us about your symptoms — we will match you with the right specialist, confirm your treatment path, and handle everything from there.
Speak to a care coordinator directly. No forms, no waiting.
Describe your symptoms. We respond within the hour.
We call you back. Share your query and we take it from there.
Verify your number and schedule with the right specialist.
No consultation fee charged by AmuneCare. Specialist fees apply at the time of appointment.