Can glansitis be transmitted to a partner?

Glansitis is not usually transmitted to partners because glansitis is not a sexually transmitted disease. Glomerulitis is just inflammation of the head of the penis, an inflammation of the head of the penis caused by factors such as traumatic irritation or infection. Since glansitis coexists with inflammation of the inner plate of the foreskin, glansitis and prepuceitis are usually referred to together as glansitis of the foreskin. The clinical manifestations are localized redness, swelling, erosion, and ulcer formation. Glansitis can retrograde infection of the urinary system, causing cystitis and pyelonephritis. In addition, if the inflammation is not cured for a long time, it can directly affect sexual life, which can lead to impotence and premature ejaculation. It occurs in summer, autumn and mostly in young and middle-aged men, especially those who are circumcised or circumcised. Glansitis is associated with a variety of factors, which can be divided into infectious and non-infectious factors. Under normal circumstances, the foreskin capsule can host a large number of bacteria, yeast and clostridia, and these microorganisms can become pathogens when the local or systemic resistance is weakened. Bacteria cause mainly, such as Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, followed by Candida, Trichomonas, Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, and gonorrhea bifidum can also cause glansitis of the foreskin; non-infectious factors are urine, alkaline substances and stimulation of foreign substances, friction, and trauma. The long foreskin, insufficient cleaning, resulting in the accumulation of foreskin scale, etc. can cause damage to the inflammation of the glans prepuce and aggravate the infection of various pathogenic bacteria, thus leading to glans prepuce.