Naked eye hematuria or microscopic hematuria is a common symptom in urological practice, and some of this hematuria is due to prostate bleeding, which is mostly due to prostate enlargement or prostate cancer.
The larger the prostate, the higher the risk of prostate bleeding because the larger the prostate, the more blood supply is needed and the more blood vessels are enlarged. Clinically, cystoscopy reveals that many enlarged and tortuous vessels are seen on the surface of the prostate in patients with prostate enlargement, and these vessels are easily stretched during urination to rupture and bleed, even in larger amounts.
Patients with prostate cancer also have many cases of carnal hematuria. For patients with prostate cancer, carnal hematuria comes partly from the rupture and bleeding of the tumor itself and partly from the invasion of the bladder and urethra by the nauseating tumor. The first thing you need to do is to make a clear diagnosis of the prostate bleeding, and then proceed to the next step of treatment according to the patient’s general condition.