Proctology & Colorectal Care

Common Lifestyle Habits That Increase the Risk of Proctology Conditions

Proctology conditions — including piles, anal fissures, anal fistulas, and pilonidal sinus — have become increasingly common. Long working hours, sedentary jobs, unhealthy eating patterns, and inadequate water intake all place repeated pressure on the anal and rectal region, and understanding these habits is the first step toward prevention.

7 min read · Patient Guide

Medfine Hospitals, Bengaluru

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Everyday habits that raise your risk of proctology conditions

Proctology conditions are strongly linked to everyday lifestyle habits that put pressure on the anal and rectal region — from what we eat and drink to how long we sit and how we respond to the body’s natural signals. Many people ignore early symptoms out of embarrassment, allowing a manageable problem to worsen over time.

The good news is that most proctology conditions are preventable. Recognising the habits that raise your risk is the simplest way to protect your digestive health and avoid the need for medical treatment later.

The Baseline

What are proctology conditions?

Proctology is the branch of medicine that focuses on diseases of the rectum, anus, and lower digestive tract. It covers conditions such as piles (hemorrhoids), anal fissures, anal fistulas, pilonidal sinus, and perianal abscess — each with different causes, but many sharing the same everyday risk factors.

What is a proctology condition?

Proctology conditions are disorders of the anus and rectum — such as piles, anal fissures, fistulas, and pilonidal sinus — that develop when repeated pressure, straining, or poor bowel habits affect the anal canal and rectal veins.

Recognising these risk factors early makes prevention far simpler than treating an advanced condition later.

The Root Causes

Common lifestyle habits that increase the risk

Many proctology conditions share the same underlying causes. These are the seven most common lifestyle habits doctors see behind piles, fissures, and related problems.

01

Eating a Low-Fibre Diet

Relying on processed foods, refined flour, and sugary snacks while eating very little fresh fruit or vegetables leads to constipation. Straining to pass hard stools places repeated pressure on the anal canal and rectal veins.

02

Not Drinking Enough Water

When the body doesn’t get enough fluids, stools become dry and hard to pass. Poor hydration increases straining during bowel movements, contributing to piles and fissures.

Drinking water regularly, rather than waiting until you feel thirsty, keeps stools soft.

03

Prolonged Sitting

Sitting for several hours a day — common among office workers, drivers, and students — increases pressure around the pelvic and rectal region and reduces blood circulation, aggravating existing anorectal conditions.

04

Lack of Physical Activity

A sedentary lifestyle slows digestion and bowel movement, making constipation — one of the primary risk factors for proctology conditions — far more likely.

05

Unhealthy Toilet Habits

Ignoring the urge to pass stools, using a mobile phone on the toilet, and sitting far longer than necessary all increase pressure on the rectal veins and let stools become harder and more difficult to pass.

06

Chronic Straining During Bowel Movements

Repeated straining increases pressure inside the anal canal, causing swelling of blood vessels and repeated injury to the delicate lining — one of the strongest risk factors for piles and anal fissures.

07

Obesity and Excess Body Weight

Being overweight increases pressure inside the abdomen and pelvic region, which can contribute to the development of hemorrhoids and other anorectal conditions.

Prevention

How to reduce your risk of proctology conditions

Preventing proctology conditions often begins with simple lifestyle modifications that reduce pressure on the anal and rectal region. Healthy daily habits typically include:

Why It Matters

Benefits of healthy lifestyle habits

Small, consistent changes to daily habits can meaningfully reduce the risk of anorectal disorders and support better long-term digestive health.

The Routine

A simple daily prevention routine

A few consistent habits, practised daily, go a long way in protecting anorectal health.

01

Eat fibre-rich foods with every meal

02

Drink water consistently through the day

03

Take a short walk or stretch every hour

04

Respond promptly to the urge to pass stools

05

Limit toilet time to around 5–10 minutes

Staying Consistent

Making these habits stick

Long-term anorectal health comes from consistency, not one-time fixes. Patients are encouraged to:

Don't Wait On These

When should you consult a proctologist?

Consult a proctologist if you notice

Find out how we can help protect your digestive health.

Medfine Hospitals provides comprehensive diagnosis and treatment for piles, anal fissures, anal fistulas, pilonidal sinus, and other anorectal disorders, with personalised treatment plans and minimally invasive options whenever appropriate.

Common Questions

Frequently asked questions

Low-fibre diets, inadequate water intake, prolonged sitting, lack of exercise, chronic constipation, excessive straining, and unhealthy toilet habits are among the most common lifestyle factors.

Yes. Adequate hydration helps soften stools, reduces constipation, and minimises straining during bowel movements, lowering the risk of piles and anal fissures.

Yes. Sitting for long periods increases pressure on the rectal veins and may contribute to the development or worsening of hemorrhoids. Taking regular breaks helps reduce this risk.

Regular physical activity supports healthy digestion, improves bowel movements, reduces constipation, and helps maintain a healthy body weight, all of which support better anorectal health.

You should seek medical advice if you experience persistent anal pain, bleeding, swelling, itching, pus discharge, or symptoms that do not improve with lifestyle changes.

While not every condition can be prevented, healthy lifestyle habits significantly reduce the risk of many common anorectal disorders and support better long-term digestive health.