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New to chronic prostate inflammation

For relationship between prostatitis and infertility as well as for the treatment of prostatitis using osteopathy and medicine four new studies were presented at the German Association of Urology congress in 2009.
After the first examination (Diemer) the role of prostate inflammation in infertility could be underestimated. Up to 20% of them are supposed to be caused by the MAGI (English male accessory gland infection, literally: inflammation of the male side glands, which are the epididymis , seminal vesicles and prostate, medical, seeds pathway infection). It is according to the criteria of the WHO (World Health Organization) classified as prostatitis according to criteria of the NIH (National Institutes of Health, USA) is divided. Thus, although both systems were all cases of chronic inflammation of the epididymis ( epididymitis ), or urethra ( urethritis ) recognizable. However, were diagnosed with MAGI only a small proportion of men with chronic bacterial prostatitis or chronic inflammatory (NIH II and IIIa) were recognized. Thus, the WHO criteria for recognizing such inflammation proved to be unsuitable.
By contrast, another study the relationship between prostate inflammation and infertility questioned (F. Lehner car). In it, there was no correlation between inflammation in the semenand the sperm quality, neither in men with chronic inflammatory or non-inflammatory chronic prostatitis (NIH IIIa or IIIb) even in infertile men. The signs of inflammation in the semen and the subjective state of prostatitis patients also did not hang together.
The treatment of chronic non-bacterial prostatitis (chronic pelvic pain syndrome, NIH III) was the subject of a study with 33 patients (Marx). About 8 weeks were 20 of them each 5 osteopathic treatments (holistic therapy with special handling techniques), 13 but only the same number of sham treatments with simple gymnastic exercises. Then, the discomfort when urinating, the pain caused by the inflammation and quality of life in the osteopathy group were significantly better, while they remained practically the same in the control group. In control studies 6 weeks after the last treatment and 1.5 years later, the improvements in the osteopathy group were even higher. This osteopathy is perhaps an interesting option in the often difficult treatment of chronic prostatitis.
The fact that an herbal extract of grass pollen, for the treatment of benign prostatic syndrome (BPS serves), is also effective in prostate inflammation, a study with 93 men (FME car Lehner).After a treatment period of 24 weeks improved in patients with chronic inflammatory prostatitis (NIH IIIa), both the subjective state as well as the number of inflammatory cells in the urine without significant side effects were observed.

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