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Prostatitis
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Prostatitis may account
for up to 25 percent of all office visits by young and middle-aged
men for complaints involving the genital and urinary systems.
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Prostate
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The term prostatitis actually encompasses four disorders:
- Acute bacterial prostatitis is the least common of the
four types but also the easiest to diagnose and treat effectively.
Men with this disease often have chills, fever, pain in the lower
back and genital area, urinary frequency and urgency often at
night, burning or painful urination, body aches, and a
demonstrable infection of the urinary tract as evidenced by white
blood cells and bacteria in the urine. The treatment is an
appropriate antibiotic.
- Chronic bacterial prostatitis, also relatively
uncommon, is acute prostatitis associated with an underlying
defect in the prostate, which becomes a focal point for bacterial
persistence in the urinary tract. Effective treatment usually
requires identifying and removing the defect and then treating the
infection with antibiotics. However, antibiotics often do not cure
this condition.
- Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome is the
most common but least understood form of prostatitis. It is found
in men of any age, its symptoms go away and then return without
warning, and it may be inflammatory or noninflammatory. In the
inflammatory form, urine, semen, and other fluids from the
prostate show no evidence of a known infecting organism but do
contain the kinds of cells the body usually produces to fight
infection. In the noninflammatory form, no evidence of
inflammation, including infection-fighting cells, is
present.
Antibiotics will not help nonbacterial
prostatitis. You may have to work with your doctor to find a
treatment that's good for you. Changing your diet or taking warm
baths may help. Your doctor may give you a medicine called an
alpha blocker to relax the muscle tissue in the prostate. No
single solution works for everyone with this condition.
- Asymptomatic inflammatory prostatitis is the diagnosis
when the patient does not complain of pain or discomfort but has
infection-fighting cells in his semen. Doctors usually find this
form of prostatitis when looking for causes of infertility or
testing for prostate cancer.
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American Foundation for Urologic
Disease
The Prostatitis Foundation
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