Sexual Health
What are the specific manifestations of prostatitis? Can prostatitis cause laborious urination
If men understand the clinical symptoms of prostatitis, they can help men find the existence of prostatitis as soon as possible.
At the initial stage of the disease, prostatitis has white urine at the mouth of the urethra and frequent urination. The specific manifestations are:
Frequency of urination: It is the early signal of prostatitis. The most obvious early sign is the increase of the number of nocturnal urination, which gradually increases with the progress of urinary tract obstruction.
Discomfort in urination: after urination, there is dull pain in the urethra, or the urine drips out, or discomfort in the lower abdomen. These are not the physiological feelings of normal people after urination.
Difficulty in urination: due to urethral obstruction and increased resistance to urination, abdominal pressure must be increased to overcome resistance to urination, so it is difficult to urinate. Posterior urethral discomfort and perineal compression: due to the stimulation of the posterior urethra caused by prostatic hyperplasia, the prostate has stone friction, and the pelvic X-ray film has positive stone shadow for identification.
Urine changes: some patients have blood vessels ruptured and bleeding due to prostate congestion or prostate vascular dilation, and hematuria can be seen at this time. Some patients are prone to complicated with urinary tract infection due to urinary tract obstruction and urinary flow obstruction. After the early symptoms of pyuria and prostate, with the development of the disease, prostate fibrohyperplasia and denatured prostate massage make it difficult for prostate fluid to flow out.
The following symptoms will gradually appear in prostatitis:
Pain: burning sensation, ant sensation, perineal and anal pain in the posterior urethra can radiate to the lumbosacral, groin, pubic bone, penis, testicle, and occasionally to the abdomen.
Urinary system symptoms: acute prostatitis involves the urethra. Patients urinate lightly, urgently, and painfully. Some patients may have hematuria. Mucus or purulent secretion can be discharged from the urethra before urination in the morning or before defecation.
Sexual dysfunction: acute prostatitis may have symptoms such as loss of libido, impotence, premature ejaculation, pain in ejaculation, increased frequency of ejaculation, etc. Some patients have blood sperm or inflammation of the vas deferens, resulting in decreased sperm activity and infertility.
Symptoms of neurasthenia: due to the patient's lack of correct understanding of acute prostatitis or long-term cure, depression, fatigue, insomnia, etc. may occur.
Secondary symptoms: conjunctivitis, iritis, arthritis, neuritis and other abnormal reactions caused by bacterial toxins can occur.