Antimicrobial therapy for prostatitis

  The prostate fluid culture found pathogenic pathogens is the basis for the selection of antibacterial drug treatment. If a patient with non-bacterial prostatitis shows signs of bacterial infection and is not treated with general therapy, antibacterial medication may be used as appropriate. The choice of antimicrobial drugs should be noted that there is a prostate-blood barrier consisting of a lipid-like membrane between the prostate alveoli and the microcirculation, which prevents the passage of water-soluble antibiotics and greatly reduces the therapeutic effect. When prostate stones are present, the stones can become a refuge for bacteria. The above factors make it difficult to treat chronic bacterial prostatitis, which requires a long course of treatment and is prone to relapse.  If you’re looking for a new way to get the most out of your life, you’ll be able to get the most out of your life. Patients with “aseptic” prostatitis can also be treated with drugs that are effective against bacteria and mycoplasma, such as quinolones, and tetracyclines and quinolones in combination or at intervals. If antibiotic therapy is not effective and the patient is confirmed to have aseptic prostatitis, antibiotic therapy is discontinued.  Type I is mainly broad-spectrum antibiotics, symptomatic treatment and supportive therapy. Type II is recommended to be treated mainly with oral antibiotics with a choice of sensitive drugs for 4-6 weeks, during which the patient should be evaluated in stages of efficacy. Type III can be treated with oral antibiotics for 2-4 weeks before evaluating the efficacy. It is also supplemented with NSAIDs, alpha-receptor antagonists, and herbal preparations to improve urinary symptoms and pain. type IV does not require treatment.  The anti-infective treatment with Chinese patent medicines and herbs is widely used in clinical practice during the treatment of prostatitis. type I and type II prostatitis are treated with antibiotics and symptomatic treatment along with evidence-based application of heat-clearing, detoxifying, and dampness-relieving herbs; type III (IIIA IIIB) prostatitis is treated with evidence-based use of heat-clearing, diuretic, and laxative, blood-stasis-relieving, and pain-relieving herbs, with definite results.