Prostatitis does not usually lead to proteinuria, and elevated urinary protein is often indicative of renal pathology.
Prostatitis is usually caused by a variety of pathogenic infections that lead to this group of diseases and require a visit to the urology department.
Patients with prostatitis are usually clearly diagnosed by prostate fluid examination, which is characterized by a leukocyte count greater than 10 per field of view at high magnification, accompanied by a decrease in lecithin vesicles. Leukocytes can also be seen in urine routine, and bacteria can be found through urine culture, but there is usually no elevated urine protein.
Normal human urine usually contains no protein or only a very small amount of protein. When the protein concentration in the urine is greater than 100mg/L or 150mg/24h, the protein characterization test is positive. Proteinuria often suggests that there may be acute nephritis, diabetic nephropathy and other kidney diseases, patients should go to the hospital in time to clarify the cause of the disease and then treated.