Fissures are small tears in the skin around the opening of the anus that cause a sharp, burning pain during a bowel movement, according to the UK-based health information website Bupa. Fissures are usually caused by hard and dry bowel movements,...
The gallbladder, a small sac located in the abdomen near the liver, serves one function--to hold bile until the intestines need it for digestion. The most common disorder of the gallbladder, the formation of gallstones, can lead to gallbladder...
An anal fissure is a painful tear in the anal lining, usually caused by constipation. Straining and hard stool, combined with increased anal sphincter tone, cause tearing. The repeated trauma of bowel movements prevent healing, leading to a...
The gallbladder is sac in your body responsible for storing bile (a fluid that helps break down fatty foods). Pain occurs in your gallbladder when its tissues are inflamed or a stone is causing obstruction. Gallbladder pain is usually located in...
The gallbladder is located on the upper right side of the body just under the ribcage and the liver. The National Digestive Diseases Information Clearinghouse states that sex, diet, age, weight and family history are factors in gallstone...
A neurogenic bladder is an abnormally functioning bladder, either overactive or underactive, caused by damage to the nerves controlling it. This damage may be caused by trauma to the spinal cord or diseases that affect the nervous system....
An anal fissure results from a tear in the lining of the anus and is a common affliction of the anus. Each bowel movement produces pain and bleeding due to irritation of the open cut and also prevents the cut from healing, resulting in the...
Painful but uncommon injuries that develop most frequently in people with chronic intestinal disorders, such as Crohn's disease, anal fistulas usually require surgery to heal. An anal fistula forms an abnormal channel between the anal canal and...
Anal fissures are tears in the lining of the anus, the opening of the rectum to the outside of the body, that cause pain and bleeding during and after bowel movements. In many cases, anal fissures heal on their own within a few weeks. In some...
Gallstones are hard objects that form inside the gallbladder, a membranous sac located underneath the liver on the right side of your abdomen. Gallstones typically cause no symptoms, but when they do, they take the form of pain, infection and...