Is bifurcated urination prostatitis? Common causes of urinary bifurcations: urethritis, urethral adhesion, urethral calculus, urethral foreign body, urethral stricture, hypospadias, etc.
Mechanism of urination bifurcation:
First, there is partial obstruction at the anterior urethra or urethral opening. After inflammation of the urethra, the urethra swells and thins, and urine flows out unobstructed, resulting in bifurcated urination, or there are hyperplasia, adhesion, stones, and foreign bodies in the inner mouth of the urethra, blocking the urethra, and urine flows out unobstructed, resulting in bifurcated urination.
The other is that there is too much urine in the bladder, the pressure in the bladder is high, the urethra is relatively narrow, and the urine flow is not smooth, resulting in bifurcated urination.
It can be said that most of the urination bifurcations are physical and temporary urination changes. Once the induced factors are removed, urination will return to normal. Pathological reasons should be taken into account when urinating for a long time. Such as stones, foreign body incarceration, phimosis, balanitis or scar formation of urethral mucosa, resulting in partial urethral stricture, usually accompanied by dysuria or urination pain.
Prostatitis patients rarely have bifurcated urination. That is to say, the main symptom of prostatitis is not bifurcated urination, and the disease that occurs bifurcated urination is not prostatitis. The symptoms of prostatitis mainly include: pain in pelvic region, such as perineum, perianal, urethra, suprapubic, groin, lumbosacral region, frequent urination, urgency, and laborious urination, but not necessarily in every patient.