In the summer and autumn, when the temperature gradually rises, and many people are complaining about the hot weather, many patients with chronic prostatitis are smiling - the annoying symptoms of "frequent urination", "urgent urination", and "pain in urination" have significantly reduced. Is prostatitis miraculously "self healing without treatment"? Actually, this is just an illusion!
Experts point out that when summer arrives, the clinical symptoms of chronic prostatitis decrease, which is a false impression caused by weather conditions for men.
Due to the high temperature in summer, it activates the neuroregulatory central function, normalizes the peripheral nerves oppressed by enlarged prostate gland, effectively relieves male physiological dysfunction associated with prostate disease, unblocks the blocked prostate tubules, eliminates clinical symptoms such as perineal distension and pain, frequent urination, urgency of urination, pain in urination, and testicular distension and pain, and accelerates blood circulation in the human body, with strong cell regeneration ability, low pain, and easy recovery, Therefore, for prostatitis patients, summer is the golden season for treatment.
In hot summer, the secretion of sweat glands increases, and urine frequency naturally decreases. In addition, a warm climate can relax the muscles of the lesion, expand blood vessels, and accelerate blood circulation. This can alleviate the edema and congestion of the prostate, and temporarily smooth the urethra. However, once the weather turns cool, it will immediately return to its original state.
The etiology of chronic prostatitis is complex, and the manifestations of patients are also different. Some patients have obvious clinical symptoms such as frequent urination, urgency, pain in urination, waiting for urination, incomplete urination, or local pain, but all laboratory indicators are normal. Some patients have abnormal laboratory indicators such as white blood cells and lecithin, but no obvious symptoms. Therefore, the treatment of prostatitis should also vary from person to person. If the diagnosis of a disease is based solely on laboratory indicators, and the symptoms are not eliminated, such treatment is undoubtedly meaningless.
Some patients, however, discontinue treatment as soon as their clinical symptoms subside and do not adhere to full course treatment, resulting in not only a recurrence of the old disease, but also artificially increasing the difficulty of treatment. In the treatment of prostatitis, only when the symptoms completely disappear and all laboratory indicators are normal can it be said that the disease is truly cured.