As both prostate hyperplasia and prostatitis occur in the prostate gland and have many similar clinical symptoms, many patients are often prone to misunderstand that these two diseases are the same thing, but in fact, they are two completely different diseases. The former is a common disease in older men, while the latter is an inflammatory disease that occurs mostly in young and middle-aged men. However, sometimes the two can co-exist and be causal to each other, making diagnosis and treatment somewhat difficult. It is important to note here that the symptoms of difficulty urinating in some elderly patients are not always caused by prostatic hyperplasia. The reason is that when there is inflammation in the prostate, the prostate will become congested and swollen, which will also compress the prostate and cause symptoms of difficulty in urination, as well as symptoms of frequent and urgent urination. For these patients, the primary issue is to treat the prostatitis, as long as the prostatitis is cured, the symptoms of difficulty in urination can be relieved. The actual fact is that you will not be able to get a lot of money from the company. Of course, some older prostates have mild hyperplasia, and although they usually have symptoms of difficulty urinating, they are not obvious, and they do not think they are. In the case of poor urination and reduced body resistance, it is easy to cause prostatitis. Once prostatitis occurs, it will aggravate the original symptoms of difficulty in urination. The actual fact is that you should continue to make some necessary examinations after the prostatitis is cured, and closely observe the progress of the condition and treat the prostatic hyperplasia in time. You should never perform prostate removal surgery when you have prostatitis.