Prostate diseases are the most common diseases in men’s medicine, including prostatitis, prostate hyperplasia and even prostate cancer. However, many patients will be mixed up with different diseases, and think that most of them are related to “sex”, or even treated as sexually transmitted diseases, and as a result, they do not dare to seek medical treatment, and sneak treatment. From the clinical point of view, the most common misconceptions about prostate diseases are seven categories. The first is the fact that the most important thing is the fact that it is not possible to find the best way to get the most out of the situation. The most important thing is to eat less meat, more beans and vegetables to protect the prostate has a great benefit. The third myth: prostatitis and hyperplasia is the same thing often patients will be confused with the two, and there are many patients worried about chronic prostatitis will directly cause prostate hyperplasia. In fact, these two diseases are completely different in nature, the cause of the disease, pathology is different, there is no inevitable connection. Misunderstanding four: prostate disease as a sexually transmitted disease Many patients in the discovery of frequent urination, urinary urgency, or lack of sexual desire, always mistakenly thought that the sexually transmitted disease, coupled with the abuse of antibiotics self-treatment, but exacerbated the deterioration of the condition. In fact, men at the same time have the majority of the above symptoms are prostatitis, only symptomatic treatment to get rid of the root cause. The most important thing to remember is the fact that you can’t afford to buy a new one, but you can’t afford to buy a new one if you don’t want to. If you change your medication randomly, it is easy to cause flora disorders, or drug resistance, and finally easy to lead to the failure of treatment or incomplete treatment. Myth 7: Prostatic hyperplasia can only be treated by surgery When the mild symptoms of prostatic hyperplasia appear, patients can adjust their diet and lifestyle habits, coupled with appropriate medication, so that the symptoms will be reduced or disappear. Drinking moderate amounts of water, eating less spicy food, abstaining from alcohol, avoiding holding urine and sedentary and strenuous work, these are very important self-treatment methods. If there is a urinary obstruction causing hematuria, complication of hydronephrosis, urinary tract infection bladder stones and other symptoms, timely surgical treatment should be carried out. Myth 8: The cure of prostatitis is based on the test results of prostate fluid The test results of prostate fluid are not directly proportional to the patient’s symptoms, some patients have very serious symptoms, but the test results of prostate fluid are close to normal, and some patients have very mild symptoms, but the test results of prostate fluid are very serious, so the patient’s treatment should be based on the alleviation and disappearance of the symptoms, without using the test results of prostate fluid as a criterion.