Fissure Cream vs Laser Treatment — Which One Actually Works?

Dr. Abdullah Iqbal
Medically reviewed by , MBBS, FCPSGeneral Surgeon & Laser Proctologist, Karachi.
PMDC Reg. 63108-S · Pakistan Medical & Dental Council registered physician.
Published: June 29, 2026 · Last updated:

This is one of the most common dilemmas I see in my clinic. A patient comes in who has been applying fissure cream for months — sometimes prescribed by their GP, sometimes bought from a pharmacy without prescription. The cream provides temporary relief, but the fissure keeps coming back. They want to know: “Doctor, cream lagata rahun ya laser karwa lun?”

The honest answer is: it depends on your fissure type. In my experience, both treatments have their place, but they solve very different problems. Let me explain clearly so you can make an informed decision.

Seedhi Baat: Cream acute (nayi) fissure ke liye kaam karti hai. Chronic (purani) fissure ke liye laser treatment zaroori hota hai. Problem tab hoti hai jab log chronic fissure par bhi cream lagate rehte hain — aur months barbaad karte hain.

How Fissure Creams Work

Fissure creams work in two ways depending on their type:

1. Numbing creams (Lidocaine-based): These contain local anaesthetic that temporarily numbs the area, reducing pain during bowel movements. They do not heal the fissure — they only manage the symptom. Think of it like taking a painkiller for a broken bone — the bone is still broken.

2. Relaxing creams (GTN / Diltiazem): These contain chemicals that relax the internal anal sphincter muscle. When the sphincter relaxes, blood flow improves to the fissure area, which helps healing. According to Mayo Clinic, GTN ointment heals about 50% of chronic fissures — but the other 50% do not respond.

I prescribe these creams regularly for acute fissures, and they work well when combined with dietary changes and sitz baths. Lekin agar 6-8 hafton mein fissure theek nahi hua, toh cream ka aur istamaal bekar hai.

How Laser Fissure Treatment Works

Laser sphincterotomy is a completely different approach. Instead of trying to relax the muscle with chemicals (which is temporary), the laser makes a precise, controlled division of a small portion of the internal sphincter muscle. This permanently reduces the spasm, restores blood flow, and allows the fissure to heal once and for all.

The procedure takes 10-15 minutes, is done as a day-care surgery (you go home the same day), and most patients report significant pain relief within 48 hours. In my experience of performing this procedure on hundreds of patients, the success rate is above 95%.

Cream vs Laser — Direct Comparison

FactorFissure CreamLaser Treatment
Best forAcute fissure (less than 6 weeks)Chronic fissure (more than 6-8 weeks)
Success rate50-60% for chronic fissuresAbove 95%
Treatment duration6-8 weeks of daily applicationOne-time 15-minute procedure
Pain reliefTemporary (while cream is active)Permanent within 48 hours
Recurrence riskHigh — fissure often returnsVery low (under 5%)
Side effectsHeadaches (GTN), skin irritationMinimal — mild discomfort for 2-3 days
CostPKR 500-2,000/tube (multiple needed)One-time procedure fee

When I Recommend Cream

I prescribe fissure cream when:

• The fissure is less than 6 weeks old (acute)
• The patient has not tried conservative treatment before
• The patient is pregnant (where surgery should be avoided — read my guide on fissure during pregnancy)
• The fissure is mild with minimal pain

When I Recommend Laser

I strongly suggest laser treatment when:

• The fissure has persisted beyond 6-8 weeks despite cream use
• There is visible scar tissue or a sentinel pile
• The patient has tried multiple creams without lasting relief
• The fissure keeps recurring after cream treatment

Mere tajurbe se, jo patients 4-5 tubes cream use kar chuke hain aur phir bhi theek nahi hue, unke liye cream continue karna sirf waqt aur paisa barbaad karna hai. At that point, a one-time laser procedure gives permanent relief.

Mere Patients Ka Tajurba: Bahut se patients mere paas aate hain 6 month ya 1 saal creams lagane ke baad. Jab laser treatment hota hai toh kehte hain — “Doctor kaash pehle aa jata.” Agar cream 6-8 weeks mein kaam nahi kar rahi, toh agla step laser hai.

Common Mistakes I See

1. Using the wrong cream: Many patients buy a random “pile cream” from the pharmacy without knowing whether they have piles or fissure. The treatment is completely different. Proper diagnosis comes first — read about the difference between fissure and piles.

2. Stopping cream too early: Some patients feel better after a few days and stop. The fissure has not fully healed — it just stopped hurting temporarily. Complete the full course as prescribed. According to NHS UK, topical treatment should be continued for 6-8 weeks for best results.

3. Using cream indefinitely for chronic fissure: If cream has not worked in 8 weeks, more cream will not work either. The fissure needs a different treatment approach.

Related Reading

Fissure Healing Timeline — Complete Recovery Guide
7 Washroom Tips to Reduce Fissure Pain
Laser Sphincterotomy — Detailed Procedure Guide
4 Reasons Why Fissure Surgery Becomes Necessary
Pilonidal Sinus Laser Treatment in Karachi

Frequently Asked Questions

Which cream is best for fissure? +
How long should I use fissure cream before trying laser? +
Is laser fissure treatment painful? +
Can fissure come back after laser treatment? +
Why does fissure cream cause headaches? +

Cream kaam nahi kar rahi? Laser treatment ke baare mein jaanein.

Dr. Abdullah Iqbal — Pakistan’s First Laser Proctologist | Hill Park General Hospital

WhatsApp: 0333-2877351

Dr Abdullah Iqbal
Medical Disclaimer: This article is for general educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of Dr. Abdullah Iqbal or another qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. If you have a medical emergency, call your nearest emergency department immediately. Information was accurate to the best of our knowledge on the publish/update date shown above and reflects current clinical practice in Pakistan.

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