Hemorrhoids are the consequence of the sitting defecation posture.
The defecation in the natural for a human being squatting posture will resolve this problem.
Try! It is not esthetic, but don't use the toilet bowl as a squatting device; it is dangerous (can break down) and may be not effective as doesn't permit natural squatting (see the instructions).

History of research of hemorrhoids is a history of one great mistake        sikironchair_01

                         History of treatment of hemorrhoids is history of needless invasive treatment.

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 Jean-Luc Faucheron and Yves Gangner.  Doppler-Guided Hemorrhoidial Artery Ligation for the Treatment of Symptomatic Hemorrhoids: Early and Three-Year Follow-up Results in 100 Consecutive Patients. Desaese Colon and Rectum Vol 51, 6 June , 2008

Colorectal Unit, Department of Surgery, Hôpital Michallon, B.P. 217, 38043 Grenoble cedex, France
Service de Chirurgie, Centre Hospitalier de Niort, Niort, France 

Purpose Doppler-guided ligation of the hemorrhoidal arteries was described as an alternative to hemorrhoidectomy. The authors report their experience with this procedure.
Methods From 2002 to 2004, 100 consecutive patients underwent hemorrhoidal artery ligation procedure for symptomatic hemorrhoids and were reviewed at one month and at three years.
Results There was 54 females. Seventy-eight patients had Grade III hemorrhoids. Eighteen patients had previously been treated for the disease. The mean operative time was 28 minutes. On average, 8.4 ligatures were placed. Seventy-nine patients were discharged the same day. Six patients presented with early complication: isolated pain in one, pain and bleeding in three, isolated bleeding in one, and obstructed defecation in one. Late complications occurred in six patients: anal pain in one, fissure in two, and thrombosis of residual hemorrhoids in three. Twelve patients presented with a recurrence at a mean delay of 12.6 months, which was treated by repeat hemorrhoidal artery ligation (n = 1), hemorrhoidopexy (n = 7), and hemorrhoidectomy (n = 4).
Conclusions Hemorrhoidal artery ligation procedure is safe, easy to perform, and should be considered as an alternative for the treatment of symptomatic hemorrhoids, even with a recurrence rate of 12 percent, which can be treated by the same technique or another.
Hemorrhoids - Rectal bleeding - Prolapse - Surgical management - Hemorrhoidal artery ligation
Presented at the meeting of the European Society of Coloproctology, Portomaso, Malta, September 26 to 29, 2007.

Hemorrhoids affect between 4 and 36 percent of the population. The pathogenesis of this disease remains controversial but might be a conjunction of the two theories often discussed: the mechanical explanation in which the muscular fibroplastic supportive tissue of the hemorrhoidal plexus degenerates and the vascular explanation in which the arteriovenous shunts open, leading to dilation of the hemorrhoidal venous plexus. Based on this, several operative techniques have been used to correct or remove the sliding hemorrhoids A Japanese surgeon recently introduced a new technique for the treatment of symptomatic hemorrhoids, the Doppler-guided hemorrhoidal artery ligation (HAL), based on the identification and ligation of the terminal branches of the superior rectal arteries through a proctoscope equipped with a Doppler transducer The authors report the early and long-term results (3 years) of the first 100 patients treated following this technique.