Prostatitis

Background

Prostatitis means inflammation of the prostate and comes in several different forms including:

  • Non-infectious prostatitis.

  • Infectious prostatitis - bacterial and other.

    • Acute: of short duration.

    • Chronic: of prolonged duration (more than about 6 weeks).

The diagnosis of prostatitis is most commonly given to men who do NOT have an infectious cause (i.e. non-infectious prostatitis). In practice, non-infectious prostatitis is a term used to describe irritative urinary symptoms where a definable cause cannot be identified. That is, causes such as infection, cancer, benign prostatic hyperplasia, neurogenic bladder disorders and others have not been identified. This implies that an evaluation for all of these other causes has actually taken place.

Bacterial prostatitis is usually a very straight forward diagnosis to make. In addition to symptoms consistent with invasive infection (high fever, chills and rigors), there will also be prominent urinary symptoms and virtually always test results to support the diagnosis including bacteria and pus on urine testing.

Unfortunately, many patients and physicians gloss over the critical distinction between infectious and non-infectious prostatitis. This may result in ineffective treatment or delay in diagnosing a serious condition.

Causes

Generally acute prostatitis is caused by an acute bacterial infection. Chronic prostatitis or chronic pelvic pain often is an inflammatory problem and is not necessarily associated with bacterial infection.

The types of bacteria that cause bacterial prostatitis are the same as those which cause urinary tract infections in other circumstances. Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecalis Proteus mirbelis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa are common culprits. Viral and parasitic organisms are much less common.

Diagnosis & Evaluation

Treatment

On the Web

General Urology Websites

Canadian Urological Association  Extensive library of downloadable pamphlets on a wide range of urological conditions

Cleveland Clinic

Mayo Clinic

Medline Plus Produced by the US National Institutes of Health with information on virtually every health topic and extensive list of links

UrologyHealth.org The patient information site of the American Urological Association.