Prostatitis. Prostate gland

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Stoyanov
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Prostatitis. Prostate gland

#1 Post by Stoyanov » 30 Apr 2018, 15:13

Prostatitis is an inflammatory lesion of a special organ of the male genital/reproductive system, prostate gland (also known as the prostate), which leads to disruption of its functional physiological activity.
Prostatitis is diagnosed in 30% of males 18 to 45 years old. The most common form of the disease is chronic prostatitis (in 5% of cases, the acute form is diagnosed).

Chronic prostatitis is advanced inflammatory process in the prostate gland. The stage is considered advanced because in a certain period, inflamed tissues in the prostate gland are transformed irrevocably. They stop properly functioning unlike healthy tissues. If you neglect the chronic process for a long time, this can lead to very serious consequences for a man as for a MALE. It should not be allowed that a significant part of the tissues of the prostate gland undergo this change.
However, you should not believe that chronic prostatitis is a synonym for impotence. No! It is the trouble only when in the stage of exacerbations or in severely advanced forms. Therefore, the aggravation must be suppressed as soon as it is discovered. Very few people manage to cope with acute prostatitis on time, and it still develops in a chronic form in the majority.

Prostate gland

The main function of this organ is the development of a special secret consisting of water (almost 95%), salts, phospholipids, enzymes, special proteins, etc. Each component of such a mixture plays a specific role, including
• making of a weakly alkaline/neutral environment for maintaining spermatozoa;
• liquefaction of the sperm environment to facilitate the movement of spermatozoa, preventing their agglutination;
• ensuring viability of spermatozoa in adverse conditions and nutrition, thus making them “live” for several days in the female reproductive organs;
• prevention of infection of the male urogenital system with transient/pathogenic microbes (a so-called antimicrobial function).
The urogenital tract is protected against infections by a number of mechanisms, including the following:
• zinc-peptide complex (also called a prostatic antibacterial factor); in the secretion of the gland, the amount of zinc responsible for antimicrobial activity and participating in testosterone metabolism is a hundred times higher than the content of the element in other areas of the body;
• antibacterial active substances;
• local protective agents (immunoglobulins).
In addition, the prostate gland takes part in the process of urination (by retraction of smooth muscles), ejaculation (by ejection of sperm through the ducts located along the sides of the seminal hillock), and exchange of hormones.
Thus, failure even in one of the components of this complex structure will entail many serious consequences for the male genitourinary system.

Prostate Adenoma is a Benign Prostate Hyperplasia (BPH, or, in other words, a benign tumor), which is not cancer, although there is small choice in rotten apples. Still, there is a panacea against the ailment. Earlier, the Benign Prostate Hyperplasia was treated by radical methods, that is, by prostatectomy, which accompanied by drastic worsening of the quality of life of a man due to problems with the control of urination. Today, people are being treated in a more humane way, only the tumor is removed, and the prostate gland is left intact. After about one-year rehabilitation, the prostate gland almost completely recovers functioning, including normal uncomplicated urination.

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