After the Spring Festival each year, the number of patients in these specialized hospitals will significantly increase. Prostatitis, dysfunction, and urinary and reproductive infections are diseases that are prone to high incidence among men after long holidays. Experts remind men that if they develop corresponding symptoms, they should promptly make adjustments or go to a professional hospital for standardized examination and treatment, in order to restore their normal work and life as soon as possible.
During the Spring Festival holiday, excessive eating and excessive staying up and playing can easily lead to changes in diet, living habits, and lifestyle, which can easily lead to low body immunity.
Focus 1: Prostatitis: Avoid Sitting Long
During the Spring Festival, many people like to play mahjong and cards, and often play all night. Unexpectedly, this type of entertainment that takes place while sitting for a long time is likely to lead to prostate congestion. In addition, some men from their hometown in Sichuan, Hunan and other places were aroused by the long lost home food after returning home during the Spring Festival. They ate Spicy Hot Pot, hot pot and other spicy stimulating food every day, plus vascular dilation and organ congestion caused by smoking and drinking, which led to repeated attacks of prostatitis.
Experts point out that frequent, urgent, and incomplete urination are early signs of prostate disease, especially the increase in the frequency of nocturnal urination, which should be given sufficient attention. In addition, prostate disease can also cause pain in areas such as the lumbosacral region, which can lead to male dysfunction, blood semen, dizziness, dizziness, memory loss, insomnia, forgetfulness, and other symptoms.
Experts remind that if prostate diseases are not treated promptly, they can lead to seminal vesiculitis, orchitis, cystitis, male dysfunction, infertility, and even develop into chronic nephritis and uremia. Therefore, it is necessary to pay attention to timely treatment.
Focus 2: dysfunction cannot be "face saving"
Overexertion during the Spring Festival can lead to functional decline in some men. Low back pain and feeling powerless during sex are early symptoms of sexual dysfunction.
Experts have pointed out that male dysfunction can be divided into three basic types: mental disorders, organic disorders, and testosterone secretion disorders. Generally, male friends tend to avoid medical treatment for the sake of face preservation, hoping to solve their own unspoken problems by taking health care products, but this practice often leads to serious consequences such as worsening the condition.
Focus 3: Reproductive infection should not be delayed
Due to the frequent activities of visiting relatives and friends during the Spring Festival, excessive entertainment, fatigue, and lack of sleep, the human body's resistance is reduced, and it is vulnerable to bacterial and viral infections, which can easily lead to reproductive infections. Patients may experience symptoms such as increased genital secretion and itching in the early stage; The urethra is infected by bacteria, and when urinating, it gradually feels burning pain, and even redness and swelling of the urethral orifice, painful urination, frequent urination, white dripping, hematuria, etc. may occur.
If blindly administered, it can lead to bacterial mutations, causing bacteria to develop resistance and tolerance to drugs. If not treated promptly, it can recur repeatedly, directly causing male dysfunction, leading to diseases such as prostatitis and urethritis, and even affecting reproductive function.
Therefore, andrologists suggest that male friends should pay attention to reasonable diet and living habits in daily life to prevent the occurrence of diseases. Once any discomfort is found, it is necessary to go to a professional hospital for examination and treatment in a timely manner to avoid misdiagnosis and treatment opportunities, which will bring difficulties to subsequent treatment and affect the rehabilitation process.
(Intern Editor: Cai Junyi)