This starts with the anatomy of the prostate. The essence of the prostate is composed of 30 to 50 multiple tubular vesicular glands. Each gland has a catheter, and adjacent catheters fuse with each other. Therefore, there are only 16 to 32 excretory ducts that open to the prostatic sinuses on both sides of the urethra. Because each gland tube is a blind end, when the current row of glands is infected, the infection of one gland tube does not necessarily cause the infection of adjacent glands. Therefore, when taking prostate massage fluid, the results obtained may be different due to different massage sites. That is to say, if you massage the secretion of inflamed glandular ducts, it can reflect inflammation. If you do not massage the inflamed glandular ducts, it cannot reflect inflammation.
Moreover, because the prostate fluid samples we collect are usually two or three drops, these two or three drops of samples cannot fully reflect the true situation of the entire prostate gland. Due to the length of the male urethra and the volume of the urethral cavity, the amount of prostate fluid remaining in the urethral segment during massage is also considerable. Therefore, the sequence of massaged prostate sites is different, and the inflammatory performance of the prostate fluid is also different. Therefore, the initial two or three drops of fluid cannot fully reflect the overall appearance of the prostate. Therefore, when judging the therapeutic effect of prostatitis, it is not necessary to make a judgment based on only one chemical test result, but rather to do it several times more. Generally, it is recognized by urologists that the prostate fluid is checked for more than three normal times before it can be considered as cured.