Sexual Health
What will appear in the urinary tract of male sexually transmitted diseases? Four misunderstandings should be avoided in the prevention of sexually transmitted diseases
Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) are a group of infectious diseases that seriously endanger human health. Category: In the past, only syphilis, gonorrhea, chancre and venereal lymphogranuloma were listed as classic venereal diseases. In recent years, in addition to the above four diseases, more than 20 kinds of diseases, including condyloma acuminatum, nongonococcal urethritis, genital herpes, AIDS, inguinal granuloma, pubic lice disease, trichomoniasis, viral hepatitis, scabies, and tinea cruris, have been included in the category of venereal diseases internationally, collectively referred to as sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).
What are the symptoms of male sexually transmitted diseases?
Symptom 1: skin or mucous membrane damage:
If there are erythema, papules, induration, blisters, erosion and ulcers in the external genitalia such as the foreskin, penis or glans coronal groove, or in the anus, hands, eyelids, lips, tongue, throat, etc., it may suffer from sexually transmitted diseases. For example, the painful ulcer may be chancre, and the single painless ulcer may be a stage I syphilitic chancre; Those with burning pain or clusters of blisters may be genital herpes; Itching, redness, erosion, and milk white cheese like secretion may be caused by coccidiosis; Painless papillary and cauliflower-like verrucous vegetations may be condyloma acuminatum; Wax-like umbilical-concave papules are mostly infectious soft warts; Pudendal itching, gray-black nodules on pubic hair, and moving lice are pubic lice disease.
Symptom 2: symptoms of urinary tract:
If there is mild heat sensation in the anterior urethra, abnormal secretion flows out of the urethra, or symptoms such as frequent urination, urgency, pain in urination, difficulty in urination, closed urination and terminal hematuria occur, they may also suffer from sexually transmitted diseases. For example, a large amount of thick purulent secretion at the urethral orifice may be gonorrhea; Only white thin mucus may be non-gonococcal urethritis; Only a small amount of secretion can be seen in the morning or after urination, and even a small amount of gray-white mucus or purulent secretion can be seen when pressing the urethra, which may be prostatitis; Frequent urination, urgent urination, severe pain during urination, burning sensation at the urethral orifice, and even abnormal penis or continuous erection may be acute gonorrhea; If there is inflammatory adhesion at the urethral orifice and the urine flow bifurcates like a fountain, it may be subacute gonorrhea.
Symptom 3. Inguinal lymph node enlargement:
If the lymph nodes are soft and painful, it may be chancroid transverse pain; The patients with hard and mild pain may be venereal lymphogranuloma; Hard and painless people may be syphilis; Persistent enlargement of lymph nodes in the whole body may be the chronic lymph node syndrome of AIDS.