The symptoms of prostatic hyperplasia gradually appear with pathological changes. Early symptoms due to bladder compensation are not obvious, so patients often cannot accurately recall the length of the course of disease, and various symptoms appear as the condition worsens.
The symptoms of prostatic hyperplasia gradually appear with pathological changes. Early symptoms due to bladder compensation are not obvious, so patients often cannot accurately recall the length of the course of disease, and various symptoms appear as the condition worsens.
1. Frequent urination and urgency: The most common symptom is frequent urination, which gradually worsens, especially with an increase in the frequency of nocturnal urination.
2. Progressive dysuria: The main manifestations are slow onset of urination, laborious urination, weak urination, small urinary lines, dripping urine, segmented urination, and incomplete urination.
3. Urinary incontinence:
4. Acute urinary retention: acute urinary retention can occur when there is congestion and edema of glands and bladder neck caused by cold, alcohol, fatigue and other incentives. The patient's bladder is extremely distended, causing pain, frequent urination, restlessness, and difficulty falling asleep.
5. Hematuria: The amount of bleeding varies and is often intermittent, with occasional large amounts of bleeding. Blood clots fill the bladder and require urgent treatment.
6. Symptoms of renal insufficiency: Late stage renal dysfunction due to long-term urinary tract obstruction, characterized by loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, and anemia.
Other symptoms: Relying on increasing abdominal pressure to urinate due to long-term difficulty in urinating can cause or worsen hemorrhoids, anal prolapse, and hernia.