The prostate is a very important part of the male reproductive system and is a place that is prone to problems. Prostatitis, benign prostatic hyperplasia and other problems can directly trouble male friends. Prostate hyperplasia is a long-term disease that troubles men and is very difficult to cure. This article will provide a detailed explanation of why benign prostatic hyperplasia is difficult to cure.
Can benign prostatic hyperplasia be cured
Prostate hyperplasia is relatively difficult to cure, and once it appears, it often indicates that it will continue to develop and is difficult to cure.
Four complex relationships make prostate hyperplasia difficult to cure
1. The etiology is complex: work pressure, irregular lifestyle, prolonged sitting, and mental stress are the main factors that induce male prostate hyperplasia, but mycoplasma, chlamydia, viruses, fungi, or autoimmune diseases may also be one of the causes. At the same time, other male diseases can also lead to prostate hyperplasia, and the complex etiology makes it even more difficult!
2. The anatomical relationship is complex: the prostate gland is deeply located in the male pelvic cavity, with a capsule formed by connective tissue and smooth muscle on its surface. Antibiotics cannot penetrate the prostatic capsule, so the therapeutic effect of antibiotics is not very ideal! The glandular ducts outside the prostate gland form a right angle with the urethra, and some even enter the urethra obliquely, which is not conducive to the discharge of secretions and can easily allow urethral microorganisms to enter the gland, making treatment difficult.
3. The relationship between neighbors is complex: the prostate gland is adjacent to the seminal vesicles, vas deferens, ureters, bladder, and rectum, so prostate hyperplasia is often secondary to inflammation of other organs in the urinary and reproductive system. Even if the inflammation of the prostate gland is treated in a timely manner, it is threatened by reinfection. Patients not only need to treat prostate hyperplasia, but also related diseases require systematic treatment!
4. The doctor-patient relationship is complex: precisely because prostatitis is difficult to treat, quack doctors have an opportunity to take advantage of it. Incorrect and unscientific treatment methods emerge one after another, all of which have only one result: making the condition worse! Furthermore, some patients who have received formal treatment but have undergone repeated examinations without finding objective inflammatory indicators, believe that they have been cured and no longer consolidate treatment. Some patients also do not pay attention to their usual habits, resulting in a vicious cycle of infection treatment reinfection treatment!
Through the introduction in this article, it can be known that benign prostatic hyperplasia is a very difficult disease to cure, and once it occurs, it often indicates that there is a major problem with the prostate. This article also introduces some reasons why prostate hyperplasia is difficult to cure for a long time. You'd better pay attention to these issues when treating prostate hyperplasia.