As you age, many diseases "follow" men, such as impotence. However, many men have a certain misunderstanding of impotence, believing that insufficient hardness is impotence. In fact, in clinical practice, there are corresponding criteria for the diagnosis of impotence, and some diseases can also cause "insufficient hardness" problems, such as the following diseases.
1. Prostatitis. Prostatitis is divided into Type I (acute bacterial prostatitis), Type II (chronic bacterial prostatitis), Type III (chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome), and Type IV (asymptomatic prostatitis). Generally speaking, both Type II and Type III are chronic prostatitis with similar clinical symptoms, including pelvic and sacral pain, abnormal urination, and sexual dysfunction, collectively referred to as prostatitis syndrome. These two types of patients occasionally experience sexual dysfunction, including decreased libido, premature ejaculation, ejaculatory pain, decreased erection, and impotence.
2. Urethritis and cystitis. Generally speaking, urethritis and cystitis do not directly cause impotence, but if they are not treated in a timely manner, affecting prostate function, they are likely to cause sexual dysfunction.
Once there are problems such as relatively insufficient stiffness and non lasting erections, do not judge yourself as suffering from impotence, let alone purchase and take medication to treat impotence. Appropriate lifestyle adjustment should be carried out first. If there is still no remission, you should go to the hospital to determine whether it is impotence before proceeding to the next step of treatment.