Learn about tests and treatments for conditions of the prostate gland that cause pain, trouble with urination, and other symptoms.
Update Date: 22.02.2025
Prostatitis is a condition of the prostate gland most often linked with swelling and irritation, called inflammation. Prostatitis can make it painful or hard to urinate. It also may cause pain in the groin, pelvic area or genitals. Bacterial infections cause some but not all prostatitis.
The prostate gland, about the size of a walnut, sits just below the bladder in people assigned male at birth. It surrounds the top part of the tube that drains urine from the bladder, called the urethra. The prostate and other sex glands make the fluid that carries sperm during ejaculation. This fluid is called semen.
There are four main types of prostatitis:
Symptoms of prostatitis depend on the type of condition. They may include:
Several conditions can cause symptoms like those of prostatitis. Get a diagnosis and treatment as soon as possible.
Get care right away if you:
Causes depend on the type of prostatitis.
Risk factors for prostatitis include:
Other risk factors for chronic prostatitis, also called chronic pelvic pain syndrome, may include:
Complications of acute or chronic prostatitis can include:
Complications of chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome may include:
There's no proof that prostatitis can lead to prostate cancer. Researchers are looking into whether long-term irritation of the prostate is a risk factor for cancer.
Several conditions can cause symptoms like those of prostatitis. Your healthcare professional may send you to a specialist in urinary and reproductive system conditions, called a urologist. Diagnosis involves a physical exam, review of your symptoms and medical history, and tests.
Diagnostic tests to assess for infection may include:
If the first tests show no sign of infection, you may have other tests, including:
Treatment for prostatitis depends on the type you have and your symptoms.
For acute or chronic bacterial prostatitis, you take antibiotics. Acute prostatitis may need antibiotics given through a tube in a vein, called an IV, in the hospital for a short time.
The course of antibiotic treatment is most often 4 to 6 weeks. Sometimes it can be longer. Take all the medicine to get rid of the infection and lower the risk of chronic bacterial prostatitis.
Medicines called alpha-blockers help relax the bladder neck and the muscle fibers where the prostate joins the bladder. This treatment might ease symptoms, such as pain while urinating or trouble urinating.
Alpha-blockers most often treat people with chronic prostatitis, also called chronic pelvic pain syndrome. Alpha-blockers also can ease urinary symptoms of bacterial infections.
Your healthcare professional may prescribe pain medicine or suggest medicines you can get without a prescription. These include acetaminophen (Tylenol, others) and ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin IB, others).
Your healthcare professional may advise that you see a mental healthcare professional. This can help you manage stress, depression or worry that may be linked with long-term pain.
Do the following to help ease some symptoms of prostatitis:
Alternative therapies that show some promise for easing symptoms of prostatitis include:
Talk about your use of alternative medicine practices and herbal treatments with your healthcare professional before trying any.
Your healthcare professional will review your symptoms and medical history with you. Be ready to answer the following questions:
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