As a chronic disease, prostate disease has actually accumulated a profound root cause when corresponding symptoms appear and can be detected by patients. Therefore, in order to achieve the goal of "cutting grass" in most prostate diseases, it is necessary to first achieve the premise and goal of "root removal".
Take the treatment of prostatitis as an example:
Regarding the treatment of prostatitis, currently, the most common clinical treatments are antibiotic therapy and various physical hyperthermia.
Antibiotic treatment has a certain effect on bacterial prostatitis, but has no therapeutic effect on aseptic prostatitis.
It is worth mentioning that this effect is only reflected in the superficial killing of pathogenic bacteria. Because the root cause of the disease has not been resolved, the lesions have not been cleared, and the disease resistance and immunity of the glands have not been restored, even if the goal of "cutting grass" can be achieved, due to the presence of the root cause, there will still be a situation of "spring breeze blowing and rebirth".
Physical hyperthermia, whether for bacterial prostatitis or aseptic prostatitis, has a good therapeutic effect. However, this effect only manifests itself in superficial relief of the corresponding symptoms.
Clinical observations have found that long-term physical hyperthermia can easily accelerate the aging and necrosis of the prostate, resulting in a decline in the resistance and immunity of the gland, and on the contrary, it is easy to trigger recurrent attacks of prostatitis.
It can be said that if prostatitis is a weed with developed vitality, then antibiotic treatment and physical hyperthermia are equivalent to a sickle for cutting grass. "Due to the fact that only the" grass leaves "and" grass stems "exposed above the ground surface can be shallowly removed, and it is not possible to deeply eradicate the" grass roots "of the" weeds "on the ground surface. Therefore, the phenomenon of" overgrown weeds "may still occur again.".