Sperm are produced in the testes under the regulation of the reproductive endocrine system and are then transported to the epididymis for processing and maturation, and eventually enter the female body for fertilization through ejaculation, mixing with prostatic and seminal vesicle fluids. Therefore, it can be determined that both the production and maturation of sperm are not related to the prostate gland. Therefore, azoospermia, oligospermia and malformed spermia are not related to chronic prostatitis. Only when the spermatozoa are expelled from the body, they meet with seminal plasma (containing 30% prostatic fluid), while in general, the semen excluded from the body liquefies in 5-25 minutes, and the liquefied semen starts to be detected, even with chronic prostatitis. Therefore, the number and morphology of spermatozoa are not related to the prostate, and the activity rate is not related to chronic prostatitis. Therefore, treating sperm abnormalities against CP is certainly futile. Of course, chronic prostatitis can affect fertility by altering semen composition, semen pH, semen viscosity and liquefaction, sperm density and semen volume. But this all has a certain limit, do not feel free to expand the relationship between chronic prostatitis and male infertility, so as not to delay the real cause of the disease.