Prostatitis Disorders of the Prostate: NIDDK
Article title: Prostatitis Disorders of the Prostate: NIDDK
Main condition: Prostatitis
Conditions: Prostatitis, Acute bacterial prostatitis, Chronic bacterial prostatitis, Asymptomatic inflammatory prostatitis
Prostatitis may account for up to 25 percent of all office visits by young and middle-age men for complaints involving the genital and urinary systems. The term prostatitis actually encompasses four disorders:
-
Acute bacterial prostatitis is the least common of the four
types but also the easiest to diagnose and treat effectively. Men with
this disease often have chills, fever, pain in the lower back and
genital area, urinary frequency and urgency often at night, burning or
painful urination, body aches, and a demonstrable infection of the
urinary tract, as evidenced by white blood cells and bacteria in the
urine. It is treated with an appropriate antibiotic.
-
Chronic bacterial prostatitis is also relatively uncommon. It
is acute prostatitis associated with an underlying defect in the
prostate, a focal point for bacterial persistence in the urinary tract.
Effective treatment usually requires identifying and removing the defect
and then treating the infection with antibiotics. However, antibiotics
often do not cure it.
-
Chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome is the most
common but least understood form of the disease. It is found in men of
any age; symptoms go away and then return without warning. Chronic
prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome may be inflammatory or
noninflammatory. In the inflammatory form, urine, semen, and other
fluids from the prostate show no evidence of a known infecting organism
but do contain cells the body usually produces to fight infection. In
the noninflammatory form, no evidence of inflammation, including
infection-fighting cells, is present.
- Asymptomatic inflammatory prostatitis is the diagnosis when the patient does not complain of pain or discomfort but has infection-fighting cells in his semen. Doctors usually find this form of prostatitis when looking for causes of infertility or testing for prostate cancer.
American Foundation for Urologic Disease
1128 North Charles
Street
Baltimore, MD 21201
Tel: (800) 242-2383, (410)
727-2908
E-mail: admin@afud.org
Home page: http://www.afud.org/
Thomas Bruckman,
Executive Director and CEO
The Prostatitis Foundation
1063 30th Street, Box
8
Smithshire, IL 61478
Tel: (888) 891-4200
Fax: (309)
325-7184
E-mail: mcapstone@aol.com
Home page: http://www.prostatitis.org/
Mike
Hennenfent, President
Additional Information on Prostatitis
The National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Information Clearinghouse
collects resource information on kidney and urologic diseases for the
Combined Health Information Database (CHID). CHID is a database produced
by health-related agencies of the Federal Government. This database
provides titles, abstracts, and availability information for health
information and health education resources.
To provide you with the
most up-to-date resources, information specialists at the clearinghouse
created an automatic CHID search. To obtain this information, you may view
the results of the automatic search on prostatitis.
Or if you wish to perform your own search of the database, you may access the CHID Online and search CHID yourself.
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E-mail: National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Information Clearinghouse
The National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Information Clearinghouse (NKUDIC) is a service of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). NIDDK is part of the National Institutes of Health under the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Established in 1987, the clearinghouse provides information about diseases of the kidneys and urologic system to people with kidney and urologic disorders and to their families, health care professionals, and the public. NKUDIC answers inquiries; develops, reviews, and distributes publications; and works closely with professional and patient organizations and Government agencies to coordinate resources about kidney and urologic diseases.
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NIH Publication No.
00-4553
e-text posted: December 1999
e-text last updated: March
2000
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