¿Son hemorroides o es otra cosa?

May 6, 2026
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Differential Diagnosis

Many patients who walk in thinking they have a hemorrhoid actually have something else entirely. Different conditions need vastly different treatments’so getting the diagnosis right matters more than you’d think.

Not sure if it’s actually a hemorrhoid? Get clarity from a board-certified colorectal surgeon.

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Using hemorrhoid cream on a non-hemorrhoid issue is like using a screwdriver on a nail’it won’t work, and you’ll stay uncomfortable. Here’s how to tell the difference.

Anal fissure
Sharp, cutting pain

Feels like passing shards of glass. Pain lingers for minutes or hours after.

Anal abscess
Constant throbbing

Pain doesn’t care if you’re sitting, standing, or in the bathroom. May come with fever.

Skin tag
Painless flap

A leftover from a healed hemorrhoid or fissure. Doesn’t bleed or prolapse.

Anal fissures: the “sharp” competitor

If your primary symptom is a sharp, cutting pain during a bowel movement that feels like you’re passing shards of glass, you likely have an anal fissure.

  • Qué es: un pequeño desgarro en el revestimiento del canal anal.
  • The key difference: Hemorrhoids are swollen veins that usually cause a dull ache or itching. Fissures cause intense, localized pain that often lingers for minutes or hours after you leave the bathroom.
  • The “tag” connection: Chronic fissures can cause a “sentinel tag” to form at the edge of the tear. This skin growth is often mistaken for a hemorrhoid, but it’s actually your body’s way of trying to protect the injury.

Anal abscesses: the urgent issue

Un absceso es una acumulación de pus provocada por una infección en una pequeña glándula situada dentro del ano. A diferencia de las hemorroides, un absceso es una infección activa que requiere atención inmediata.

  • The symptoms: Constant, throbbing pain that doesn’t care if you’re sitting, standing, or using the bathroom. May come with redness, warmth in the area, or even a fever.
  • The feel: An abscess usually feels like a firm, very tender lump. A thrombosed (clotted) hemorrhoid can also be firm and painful, but it won’t typically cause flu-like symptoms or the “heat” that an infection does.

Anal skin tags: the leftover evidence

Skin tags are simply small, floppy flaps of excess skin. They’re extremely common and are often the “souvenirs” left behind after a hemorrhoid or fissure has healed.

  • What they feel like: Skin tags are typically painless and the same color as your skin. They don’t bleed on their own and they don’t prolapse from the inside like internal hemorrhoids do.
  • The issue: They aren’t dangerous, but they can make hygiene difficult and cause itching because they trap moisture or debris. Many patients want them removed for comfort or cosmetic reasons.

Why the evaluation is non-negotiable

As Dr. Chung always says, you have to know which tool to use to complete the job. If you treat an abscess with sitz baths alone, the infection can spread. If you treat a fissure with hemorrhoid cream, you’re missing the medications needed to relax the muscle and allow the tear to heal.

At Your Friendly Proctologist, our first goal is a correct diagnosis. Whether it’s a quick office procedure for a skin tag or a specific protocol for a fissure, getting the “what” right is the only way to get to the “relief” part.

The concierge difference in diagnosis

In a large hospital system, you might wait weeks just to get an initial look at a “bump.” We prioritize accessibility because we know that when you’re in pain, every day counts. Eleven years of experience has shown that a quick, accurate diagnosis followed by direct access to your surgeon is the best way to manage these sensitive issues.

When you work with us, you get a direct line to Dr. Chung’s cell phone and a follow-up within one week of any procedure. You shouldn’t have to guess what’s happening with your own body.

!When self-diagnosis falls short

Bleeding, lumps, persistent itching, or unexplained pain can come from fissures, abscesses, skin conditions, or, less commonly, something more serious. A quick visual exam by a specialist usually settles it.

Better to know what you’re dealing with than treat the wrong thing.

Don’t assume. Get checked.

Get a proper evaluation, walk away with a clear plan, and stop wondering what’s actually going on.

Book a virtual consultLlame al (714) 988-8690