In what cases does prostatitis require treatment?

  Prostatitis is an intricate pathological change caused by a variety of complex etiologies and triggers involving inflammation, immunity, and neuroendocrine involvement of the prostate gland, resulting in urethral irritation and chronic pelvic pain as the main clinical manifestations of the disease, which is common and prevalent in adult men and is increasing year by year, although it is not a direct life-threatening disease, it can affect the quality of life of patients to varying degrees, with about The most important thing to remember is that 50% of men will be affected by prostatitis at some point in their lives. Prostatitis can affect adult men of all ages, with a higher prevalence in adult men under the age of 50. The onset of prostatitis is also associated with season, diet, sexual activity, genitourinary tract inflammation, benign prostatic hyperplasia or lower urinary tract syndrome, occupation, and psychosomatic factors. The actual fact is that a number of urologists believe that prostatitis only requires symptomatic treatment and regulation of life, attention to maintenance, and so on.  The actual prostatitis needs to be treated or not? The actual fact is that you will be able to get a lot more than just a couple of hours of work. The actual fact is that you will be able to get a lot more than just a couple of hours of work. The first thing is that there are several clinical manifestations of prostatitis.  The first is the abnormal urination, urinary urgency, frequency, painful urination, inability to urinate, urethral burning; white cloudy secretion drops out of the urethra at the end of the bowel movement or urination, commonly known as urine white.  Second, pain, often occurs in the lumbosacral region, lower abdomen, perineum, pubic bone, groin, testicles, spermatic cord, etc., the pain is mild, mostly intermittent.  Third, there are sexual dysfunction such as impotence, premature ejaculation, sexual hypogonadism; fourth, causing changes in sperm quality leading to infertility; fifth, symptoms of neurasthenia, headache, dizziness, insomnia, dreaminess, mental depression, etc.; sixth, there are no clinical manifestations, only calcification of the prostate found during ultrasound examination.  I think that in addition to the sixth case above, the other five cases of prostatitis must be treated. The reason why a lot of doctors think that prostatitis does not need special treatment is because there is no good way to treat prostatitis in the clinic, since there is no effective way to treat the disease, their argument is not justifiable, but prostatitis is not untreatable. The actual fact is that you can find a lot of people who have been in the business for a long time.