Hemorrhoids and anal fissures are often confused because both cause pain and bleeding. However, they are very different conditions with different treatments. For a complete overview of fissure management, see anal fissure treatment in Dubai.
Here is how to distinguish between the two – and why getting the diagnosis right is essential before starting any treatment.

The Key Difference: Pain Pattern

Anal Fissure Pain
- Sharp, tearing, or burning pain DURING and AFTER bowel movements
- Pain persists for 30 minutes to 2 hours after the bowel movement (sphincter spasm)
- Often severe – patients describe it as ‘passing glass’ or ‘a razor blade’
- Causes fear of the toilet – patients delay bowel movements, which worsens constipation
Hemorrhoid Pain
- Internal hemorrhoids are usually PAINLESS – they bleed without hurting
- External hemorrhoids cause discomfort, itching, or pressure – not the sharp tearing pain of a fissure
- Thrombosed external hemorrhoids cause constant throbbing pain – not linked specifically to bowel movements
Rule of thumb: If the pain is severe, tearing, and lasts more than 30 minutes after a bowel movement, think fissure first. Pain patterns differ. See why fissures hurt.
Bleeding: Similar But Different
Fissure Bleeding
- Bright red blood on toilet paper – usually a streak or small drip
- Blood is ON the stool surface or on toilet paper – not dripping or spurting
- Associated with pain
Hemorrhoid Bleeding
- Bright red blood – can drip into the toilet bowl or splash
- Can be larger amounts than fissure bleeding
- Usually PAINLESS (internal hemorrhoids)
- Blood is on the surface of stool or on toilet paper, or drips after passing stool
Other Distinguishing Features

Prolapse / Lump
- Hemorrhoids (Grade II–IV): A lump appears during or after bowel movements – may go back in spontaneously or require manual reduction. This does NOT happen with fissures.
- Fissure: No lump (unless a sentinel pile is present – a small skin tag at the outer edge of the fissure, which is a sign of chronicity).
Itching
More common with hemorrhoids (mucus discharge from prolapsing internal hemorrhoids irritates the anal skin). Fissures cause burning and pain more than itch.
Location of Discomfort
- Fissures: Very specifically pain during and after bowel movement.
- Hemorrhoids: More diffuse discomfort, heaviness, or prolapse sensation.
Can You Have Both at the Same Time?
Yes. Hemorrhoids and fissures frequently coexist – particularly in patients with chronic constipation and straining. This is another reason why an examination is essential: treating hemorrhoids will not cure a fissure, and vice versa.
When to See a Specialist
- Any anal pain or bleeding that has not resolved in 4 weeks
- Severe pain that is affecting your daily life or sleep
- Blood mixed with stool (not just on the surface) – this requires urgent investigation
- Symptoms that do not match a clear pattern – examination is the only way to be certain
References
- Lohsiriwat V. Hemorrhoids: from basic pathophysiology to clinical management. World J Gastroenterol. 2012.
Wald A et al. ACG clinical guideline: management of benign anorectal disorders. Am J Gastroenterol. 2014
Need expert treatment for hemorrhoids, anal fissure, or anal fistula? Book a consultation with Dr. Antonio Privitera in Dubai or Abu Dhabi.
📱 WhatsApp: +971 55 318 8469
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AUTHOR AUTHORITY BLOCK
Fellowship-trained at Mayo Clinic (USA) and the Royal College of Surgeons (UK). Member of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh. Certified in General Surgery by the Italian Medical Council.