Prostatitis is an intricate pathological change involving inflammation, immunity, and neuroendocrine involvement of the prostate caused by a variety of complex causes and triggers, resulting in a disease with urethral irritation and chronic pelvic pain as the main clinical manifestations. In terms of the degree of harm, prostatitis is one of the common diseases in adult men, but it is not a direct life-threatening disease, it just affects the quality of life of the patient. The onset of prostatitis may also be related to season, diet, sexual activity, inflammation of the genitourinary tract, benign prostatic hyperplasia or lower urinary tract syndrome, occupation, socio-economic status, and psycho-spiritual factors. The actual fact is that you will be able to get a good deal on your own, and you’ll be able to get a good deal on your own. The pathogen is mainly Escherichia coli, followed by Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Aspergillus, Pseudomonas spp. The majority of these are single pathogen infections. The actual antibiotics are more effective and can generally be completely cured. It is also possible to cure the chronic inflammation that usually develops. The pathogenesis of type III prostatitis is unknown, the etiology is very complex, and it may be many different diseases that are difficult to identify but have the same or similar clinical manifestations; even these diseases have been cured while the damage and pathological changes it causes still continue to act independently. It is generally more difficult to cure completely and is prone to recurrence. type IV prostatitis is easy to achieve clinical cure because it has no clinical symptoms and is often detected during examination for other related diseases, but is as difficult to cure completely as type III. So, prostatitis itself is a non-life-threatening disease with a relatively good prognosis, but in terms of pathological typing, some can be completely cured, while others are more difficult to eradicate and are prone to relapse.