Men's Secret

Prostatitis has become a secret that many men cannot talk about. Many men are even afraid of prostatitis. When prostatitis is mentioned, they think of sexual dysfunction, male infertility, abstinence, and difficulty in treatment. It may even lead to prostate cancer. Are the consequences of prostatitis so serious?

What is the prostate?

The prostate is part of the male reproductive system. It is located below the bladder and surrounds the urethra. Its main function is to provide nutrients and fluids for sperm during ejaculation. The prostate is very small in infants, but it grows during puberty due to the influence of male hormones (testo stefone). It weighs about 20 grams and maintains its size. However, when men reach 50 years old, the prostate gradually enlarges. By the age of 65-70, most men will have an enlarged prostate, and some will have symptoms. This may be benign prostatic hypertrophy, but it may also be malignant prostate cancer.

Symptoms of prostate disease

All types of prostate disease are very similar. Symptoms include frequent urination, difficulty and interruption of urination, leakage, urgency, nocturia and urinary incontinence. These symptoms may interfere with your daily life and sleep at night.

The three most common types of prostate diseases

‧ Prostate enlargement - Benign prostate enlargement is a very common disease. At around the age of 50, the prostate begins to enlarge. The enlarged prostate may compress the urethra and cause problems with urination.

‧ Prostatitis - Prostate infection can cause prostatitis. Inflammation can cause the prostate to swell and feel pain when urinating and ejaculating.

‧Prostate cancer-Prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in the United States. Like other cancers, prostate cancer cells can spread or metastasize to other parts of the body. Fortunately, prostate cancer cells grow relatively slowly, so annual examinations can diagnose and treat prostate cancer early.

Prostate disease can be cured!

Whether chronic prostatitis can be cured is a problem that patients are more worried about. From a medical standard, chronic prostatitis can be cured. As long as the symptoms disappear and there are no symptoms when you go to the hospital for examination, it is clinically cured in the eyes of doctors. One of the important factors that makes people feel that the disease is difficult to get rid of is that the disease is prone to recurrence, but this is mostly related to the timely correction of some bad living habits, just like a cold will happen if you accidentally catch a cold. In addition, due to "face" reasons, they have not received correct and timely treatment, which causes huge mental pressure and affects the cure. Therefore, the idea of ​​asking doctors to "eradicate" it through treatment is unscientific. The "secret recipe" that can really "eradicate" it is not in the hands of doctors but in the hands of patients themselves.