Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome is mainly characterized by long-term, recurrent pain or discomfort in the pelvic region lasting more than 3 months, which can be accompanied by varying degrees of urinary symptoms and sexual dysfunction, seriously affecting the patient’s quality of life. In view of the prolonged and difficult course of the disease, several common clinical questions are answered. Question 1: How many people suffer from chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome? Chronic prostatitis is very common in young male adults, and it has been reported abroad that almost 50% of adult men will be affected by prostatitis at some point in their lives, and the recurrence rate of prostatitis is as high as 20% to 50%, with urology clinics accounting for about 25% of prostatitis patients. Prostatitis is the most common cause of urology visits for men under the age of 50. Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome is the most common type of prostatitis, accounting for about 90% or more of chronic prostatitis. Question 2: Is chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome easy to treat? The reason is that the cause and pathogenesis of chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome is not yet fully understood, the clinical symptoms are variable, the diagnostic criteria and treatment methods are not uniform, and patients have experienced poor results despite long-term treatment, and many patients have experienced prolonged treatment, often called refractory chronic prostatitis, which seriously affects the quality of life of patients, and doctors often lack sufficient confidence in the treatment of chronic prostatitis. The actual fact is that the actual fact is that the particulars of the actuals are not really a lot of. The most important thing is that it is not just a matter of time. The pathogenesis of chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome has not yet been fully elucidated, and the current etiology includes pathogenic infection, prostatic urinary reflux, neuroendocrine factors, and abnormal immune response. The ambiguity of the pathogenesis may directly lead to the poor efficacy of the treatment. Currently, Western medicine is mostly symptomatic treatment for chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome, and the goal of treatment is mainly to relieve pain, improve urinary symptoms and improve the quality of life. Question 4: What is pelvic bruising in men? In a study of drivers, the incidence of prostatitis was found to be higher than that of the general population and was analyzed to be related to sedentary and prolonged fixed positions. A survey of university males found that 21.55% of patients with chronic prostatitis were sedentary, and it was found that sedentary and urine holding habits promote and induce the occurrence of chronic prostatitis, which can lead to obstruction of pelvic venous blood flow and long-term pelvic venous congestion and dilation, resulting in pelvic bruising. The results of this study showed that the prostate veins are thickened, the posterior bladder and the lateral pelvic plexus are congested, and the intrapelvic veins are stenosed or blocked, which is the cause of intrapelvic venous congestion in prostate pain. The concept of “male pelvic vein stasis syndrome” was proposed, and some scholars further studied the effect of acupuncture therapy on the relief of pelvic vein congestion in chronic pelvic pain syndrome and clinical efficacy, and the conclusion of correlation between the two was obtained by using three-dimensional magnetic resonance venography. Japanese scholars such as Inoue and G, Watari XQ confirmed that the prevalence of pelvic venous congestion was much higher in patients with chronic prostate pain than in the normal population (87% vs. 18%, p<0.0001). In China, although there are reports that almost all patients with chronic prostatitis have congested and dilated prostatic plexus, and there is a clear consensus on prostatic venous congestion in patients with chronic prostatitis, there are fewer reports on the effect of other venous congestion in the male pelvis on chronic pelvic pain syndrome, and it is difficult to explain why the entire pelvic region is painful and swollen if the patient has only prostatic venous congestion. It is difficult to explain the discomfort in the entire pelvic region if the patient has only prostatic venous congestion, and it is even more difficult to explain the painful sensation in the root of the thighs and the lumbosacral region, which are more distant from the prostate. The pelvic venous congestion on the human body may be related to microcirculatory disorders, toxic effects of vasoactive substances, oxygen free radical damage, nitric oxide mechanism, hypoxia, immunological factors, apoptosis, etc. From this analysis, the impotence, premature ejaculation, lack of ejaculatory pleasure and other adjacent organ diseases associated with chronic prostatitis high may also be related to the pelvic venous congestion, tortuous and dilated.