Do I only have blood in my stool when I have a large volume/am not constipated?

Is this typical for hemorrhoids? If I make a big sausage = blood

For small fecal stones = no blood, possibly some mucus

How does this work with colon cancer and hemorrhoids

(3 votes)
Loading...

Similar Posts

Subscribe
Notify of
11 Answers
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Totenprinz
9 months ago

Moin : ) Blood in the chair with large amounts of chair can be typical of hemorrhoids, as these are loaded by pressure.

In small amounts of chairs without blood, but with slime, hemorrhoids are also possible…. always very individual. The proctologist would be the right contact person.

Intestinal cancer, on the other hand, can cause blood in the chair regardless of the size of the chair and often goes hand in hand with other symptoms such as weight loss or persistent changes in chair habits.

A medical examination is important to determine the exact cause.

MW1965
9 months ago

My first efforts would be an appointment with the doctor, if necessary with the doctor.

Your complaints could be related to hemorrhoids as well as to anal fissure. I’ve had to do both before. The proctologist can clearly diagnose both during the first examination.

Cancer, as I have heard, can cause different symptoms, partly also changing. However, if the blood looks like normal blood (e.g. in a needle stitch in the finger), this is more likely to speak of after-close causes, such as hemorrhoids or anal fissure. When the blood comes more from the depth of the intestine, it is clearly darker to black.

MW1965
9 months ago
Reply to  kommtkollegen

In any case, the blood is not always there.

MW1965
9 months ago

When I had an anal fissure for many months, the course of the disease was also wave-shaped and unstable. There have always been many days of bleeding and many days no bleeding. It could be similar in hemorrhoids. In the case of colon cancer, I have no own experience, but it does not seem to be a uniform disease.

PsychDocJulia
9 months ago

I agree with the answer from the prince of the dead. In general, it can also be said that lighter blood speaks more for hemorrhoids, dark blood is more common in other diseases. You should just go to the proctoologist and let that go.

PsychDocJulia
9 months ago
Reply to  kommtkollegen

Don’t worry. I keep hearing this from my patients. Don’t worry me as a doctor. Try to drink and move. And distract yourself.