How to treat pediatric prepuce

For infants and young children (before the age of 3), if there are no symptoms such as difficulty in urination, urinary tract infection and foreskin infection, most of them do not need treatment. When the child is about 5 or 6 years old, circumcision should be considered when the child is circumcised and accompanied by the following symptoms: 1. The foreskin mouth has a fibrous narrow ring manifested by a ring of scar-like tissue, which is often distinctly different from normal foreskin tissue, such as strong upturning, there is often inevitable bleeding.

2, recurrent episodes of penile head circumcision, urinary tract infection manifested as foreskin redness and swelling (parents of affected children often mistakenly believe that it is due to mosquito bites, but in fact it is a foreskin infection caused by circumcision), glans redness, erosion, foreskin glans bleeding, purulent exudation, foreskin glans discomfort, itching, pain, foreskin glans moist with rash.

3, recurrent unexplained urinary tract infection, recurrent urinary frequency and urinary urgency and pain performance. Consider those who may be related to prepuce. If the foreskin bulges during urination, consider having changes in urodynamics. Examination of the prepuce orifice reveals a pinhole-like narrowing. Those with tubular narrowing of the prepuce orifice. Circumcision, probably the oldest procedure recorded by man, is a relatively mature and safe procedure.