Stomach/anal problems: hemorrhoids, nausea, bloody stool, constipation
I been experiencing stuff with hemorrhoids and I recently went to my dr to get checked and my dr said I have external hemorrhoids but before that I been getting constapted and been felling nauseous and blood begin dropping in my stool and I wanna know if it’s something else to cause all this I been stressed a lot and I have a lot of anxiety and I don’t know how to feel
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You need tell your doctor all this that has been happening before.
Don’t eat a high fiber diet, like bran flakes or something similar, not the sweet ones like cheerios. I think this will help a lot. It will keep your stool softer and be easier on your piles. Best wishes
Sorry I meant Do eat a good high fiber diet , was a mistype
So I went to the bathroom
99% of my stool was a normal color but there was a few black spots, and one that was like .5 inches wide and it looked like.. idk. Almost straight edged so I assumed it's probably zucchini peel. But got scared anyways.
Plus, some was on the TP when I wiped. Just a small amount. When it's rubbed it falls apart easily and looked like ash almost. Which was strange and idk if peel would fall apart so easily or look like that
Idk I'm just confused. I know it's probably not blood but I'm worried maybe it is. I also am curious why in Er settings I was immediately tested for blood but online people can easily tell me what is and isn't blood?
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1 ReactionThis doesn’t sound like anything dangerous.
A few black specks, or even a small dark piece, in otherwise normal stool is just undigested food. The details you gave actually point away from bleeding:
it was a small amount
the rest of your stool looked normal
it broke apart easily and kind of crumbled
When stool is black from bleeding (melena), it’s:
uniformly black, not spots
tarry, sticky, and smeary, not dry or crumbly
What you described, especially that straight edged piece, lines up with something like vegetable skin.
As for the ER part, doctors there are trained to think worst case until it’s ruled out. If someone says there’s black in my stool, their first instinct is to check for blood. That doesn’t mean they think it is blood, they just don’t want to potentially miss anything. I used to work in the ER, and it was the same approach
In non emergency or online settings, it’s more about patterns. You describe what’s going on, and we compare it to what’s textbook.
So the difference is: the ER leans toward testing to be safe, while outside of that, we can usually sort things out based on how it actually presents.
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4 Reactions@ashlynnmae
I mean I described it to the doctors in the ER perfectly fine and they still assumed it might have been that
I'm confused why that's worst case scenario when people online tell me it's not even possible to be that
@ehdog
In the ER, the focus isn’t on what’s most likely, it’s on what can’t be missed. Even if something sounds like food, hearing black in stool immediately brings up a quick checklist:
Could this be bleeding?
Should we rule it out?
That threshold is intentionally low. Even a small thing gets taken seriously, for a lot of reasons, including keeping the patient reassured.
Online, it’s a different approach. The question becomes: Based on these details, what does this sound like?
And what you described, small amount, mixed with normal stool, crumbly, with a straight edge, doesn’t match how bleeding shows up. That’s why you are being told it's not possible.
The important distinction is this:
The ER wasn’t saying, this is probably blood.
They were saying, let’s make sure it isn’t, mostly for your sake.
Honestly, it’s extremely common in the ER to test stool, even when it already looks unlikely to be blood. It happens all the time. I’ve done it countless times.
And between you and me, it ends up putting money in doctors pockets.
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2 Reactions@ashlynnmae
If it's on what can be missed isn't it possible that blood does sometimes show up in small spots like that, or am I completely misunderstanding?
@ehdog
You’re misunderstanding the nuance a bit.
Black blood doesn’t show up the way you’re worried it does.
As someone who’s worked in the ER, I’ve seen how broad the testing approach is, we’d run checks on all kinds of symptoms that clearly weren’t serious, just because that’s the protocol. It doesn’t mean we believed something dangerous was actually happening.
So no, they probably didn’t think there was blood in your case. But would they still test? Yes. That’s just standard practice, for reassurance, documentation, a thicker check, and to rule things out properly.
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1 Reaction@ashlynnmae
Never??? It seems a bit strange to test for if it Never shows up that way. Ik I'm not a doctor it just seems odd to me
@ehdog
Yes, and yes, you’re right, but again, it’s about reassurance, documentation, and other things.