The following symptoms can help you to quickly determine if you are suffering from chronic prostatitis. Pain: There is discomfort in the bladder and perineum during urination, and there may be vague pain or discomfort in the perianal area, suprapubic area, lumbosacral area, groin, lower abdomen, scrotum, inner thighs and testicles, and urethra. 3. Sexual function: A few patients may also have pain after ejaculation, hematemesis, premature ejaculation, seminal emission, loss of libido or impotence. 4, neurasthenia performance: often combined with dizziness, fatigue, insomnia, dreaminess and other symptoms. The actual fact is that there are a lot of private hospitals and travelers, black doctors, which exaggerate the harm of prostatitis and make false claims, so that many people “are prostatitis”, please be highly alert! . Type II: Chronic bacterial prostatitis; equivalent to CBP in the traditional classification method, accounting for about 5% to 8% of chronic prostatitis. There are recurrent symptoms of lower urinary tract infection lasting for more than 3 months, elevated white blood cell count in EPS/semen/VB3 and positive bacterial culture results. Type III: Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CP/CPPS), equivalent to CNP and PD in the traditional classification method, is the most common type of prostatitis, accounting for about 90% or more of chronic prostatitis. The main manifestation is long-term, recurrent pain or discomfort in the pelvic region lasting more than 3 months, which can be accompanied by varying degrees of urinary symptoms and sexual dysfunction, seriously affecting the patient’s quality of life; negative EPS/semen/VB3 bacterial culture results. Based on the results of routine EPS/semen/VB3 microscopy, the type can be subdivided into two subtypes, IIIA (inflammatory CPPS) and IIIB (non-inflammatory CPPS): Type IIIA patients have elevated white blood cell counts in EPS/semen/VB3; Type IIIB patients have white blood cells in the normal range in EPS/semen/VB3. Both subtypes IIIA and IIIB account for about 50% each. Type IV: asymptomatic prostatitis (AIP). There are no subjective symptoms and only evidence of inflammation is found during examinations concerning the prostate (EPS, semen, prostate tissue biopsy and pathological examination of prostatectomy specimens, etc.).