The prostate is a uniquely male organ and he has three separate diseases: prostatitis, which can generally occur in adolescent to older men; benign prostatic hyperplasia, which generally begins to increase at age 40 and becomes symptomatic after 50; and prostate cancer, which generally occurs in older men. This is from the perspective that the disease is not progressive. For men, prostatitis is as common as a cold and fever, and has a high incidence. Data show that the prevalence of prostatitis among Asian men aged 20-79 is 2.7%-8.7%; 8%-25% of urology clinics are for prostatitis patients; about 50% of men will be disturbed by prostatitis at some point in their lives. But the essential feature of chronic prostatitis is that there is no clear progression, not enough to threaten the life of the patient and the function of vital organs, so do not talk about chronic prostatitis, do not expand it, otherwise small problems exaggerated, inevitably towards the wrong path of mass medication and over treatment. The fact that there is hardly a doctor to treat prostatitis in clinical practice explains the important feature that prostatitis is not progressive. Prostatitis can be treated, and this is in terms of the goal of disease treatment. We treat the disease in the clinic not the labs, much less the numbers on the labs. If the symptoms caused by prostatitis (the manifestations of prostatitis are mainly: perineal discomfort; urinary urgency, frequent urination, etc.; pain after orgasm, frequent ejaculation; indirectly by affecting the psyche causing premature ejaculation and erectile dysfunction, etc.) have an impact on the patient’s quality of life, it can be treated, but it is not advocated to use expensive treatments, because prostatitis is essentially a disease without progression; if prostatitis The actual fact is that you can find a lot of people who are not able to get a good deal on this.