Male sexual pleasure comes from nerve conduction, and the organ responsible for this nerve conduction is the prostate gland.
Some patients with chronic prostatitis may experience decreased sexual pleasure and lack of pleasure in ejaculation.
"Decreased sexual pleasure is due to a problem with the transmission of sexual pleasure after the patient's prostate has hardened and stiffened, resulting in decreased sensation in the patient.". Among these patients with severe symptoms, ejaculation without pleasure can also occur. If it does not start with stiffness and sclerosis, and then repair nerve conduction, it is difficult to recover the pleasure.
The reason for ejaculatory weakness is that after the prostate becomes rigid and sclerotic, blood vessels and nerves are damaged, resulting in an impact on the contraction and relaxation of the prostate. The resulting contraction and relaxation weakness leads to a weaker squeezing action during ejaculation, and the ejaculatory action also becomes weaker.
"If you want to improve ejaculatory weakness, the only way is to treat prostate disease, repair blood vessels and nerves, and restore the contraction and relaxation of the glands.". Only when the nerves and blood vessels of the gland are restored to health can the free contraction and relaxation of the gland be restored, the squeezing action become strong, and the symptoms of ejaculation weakness be improved.
Many patients with prostatitis also experience the most severe impairment of male sexual function, resulting in infertility.
Among the patients we encounter, one fifth of them have infertility.
Prostate fluid is an important component of male semen. After sperm production, it is stored in the seminal vesicles in a sticky and frozen state. This sticky and frozen semen is actually called seminal vesicle fluid. Only two-thirds of the semen discharged by men from the body is seminal vesicle fluid, and the other one-third is prostate fluid. The two liquids are mixed together after ejaculation to form semen. Prostate fluid is an important component of seminal vesicle fluid liquefaction, which can liquefy sticky and frozen seminal vesicle fluid into a thin liquid, facilitating sperm migration, promoting sperm to combine with eggs, and forming fertilized eggs.
Many men suffering from chronic prostatitis have insufficient secretion of prostate fluid due to the stiffening and hardening of the glands, resulting in insufficient liquefaction of the semen. The semen cannot become thinner, resulting in a significant decrease in sperm motility. At the same time, it also reduces the chance of sperm and egg bonding, leading to infertility.
In this case, it is necessary to start with the treatment of prostate diseases, resolve the sclerotic lesions, restore the secretion of prostate fluid to normal, maintain sufficient semen liquefaction, facilitate sperm motility, and promote sperm egg binding.
Inadequate secretion of prostate fluid can also lead to lower sperm eligibility rates. Prostate fluid not only has the function of liquefying seminal vesicle fluid, but also contains nutrients that increase sperm energy and activity. After ejaculation, there is still a long distance for sperm to meet the egg and need to swim. Only sperm with sufficient energy and strong activity can smoothly swim forward and then combine with the egg. "Sperm with insufficient motility cannot swim forward, making circles or peristalsis in place, making it difficult to pass through the cervical canal and uterine cavity until the fallopian tube combines with the egg, so there is no chance of fertilization.".
Therefore, as long as the infertility problem caused by chronic prostatitis, it can only be fundamentally improved through the treatment of prostatitis.