Treatment of Prostatitis Cures Urethritis/UTI/Urinary Tract Infection
Introduction
Urethritis is the infection of the urethra. Urethritis is a term for men while UTI, or urinary tract infection is a term for women. Urethritis must be treated vigorously and early because the delay can cause prostatitis which is extremely difficult to treat with current western medical science.
If you see the very first sign of urethritis, the best treatment is to take oral antibiotics for at least a few weeks. The antibiotic treatment is effective on acute urethritis, UTI and urinary tract infection. The infection that causes urethritis will travel to the prostate in a few months and cause prostatitis if not properly and promptly treated.
Failure of Antibiotic Treatment on Urethritis
However, in some cases, the infection cannot be stopped due to the following reasons.
- The bacteria is very strong that antibiotics can not stop their advancement upstream in the urethra.
- Mixed infection with a few strains of bacteria that at least one type of them is not sensitive to the antibiotics administered.
- Mixed infection with different types of pathogens, including bacteria, Chlamydia, Ureaplasma, Mycoplasma, viruses, E. Coli. Antibiotics is effective only on bacteria and can not stop the advancement of other pathogens.
- The bacteria has already been treated by multiple courses of antibiotics before transmitted to you, so they are already resistant strains to certain types of antibiotics. By chance, if you are taking the type of antibiotics that the bacteria is resistant to, you can not stop the advancement of the bacteria.
- In some rare cases, virus is the only pathogen, so antibiotics cannot stop the infection.
Treatment for Resistant Urethritis
Oral Antibiotics for Resistant Urethritis
It is the first choice of treatment for urethritis. If the symptoms of urethritis are gone after a few weeks of treatment, you are lucky. In some cases with resistant urethritis, the infection will spread and cause prostatitis and epididymitis.
Urethral Perfusion for Resistant Urethritis
For resistant urethritis, urethral perfusion is a better remedy. Since most infection is in the cavity of the urethra, urethral perfusion allows antibiotics to work directly on the infected area.
Theory of Urethral Perfusion to Treat Resistant Urethritis
Oral antibiotics is not effective for resistant urethritis because the treatment can not maintain an effective level of antibiotics in urethritis, through blood capillaries. On contrary, urethral perfusion enables large volume of antibiotics solution in urethra, and maintain a much higher effective level to contain the growth of bacteria. The treatment is safe, simple and extremely effective, especially for early urethritis.
Procedure of Urethral Perfusion
The patient lay on a bed horizontally. The doctor holds the head of the penis and maintains an upward position, the other hand inserts mouth of the syringe to the opening of penis and hold it tightly. The antibiotics solution is then injected slowly to the urethra.
Home Remedy for Resistant Urethritis
Urethral perfusion is easy and simple to handle, and can be managed by most patients themselves, so we make it available for home use. The home remedy must be administered as early as possible, best before infection reaches the prostate. You also need to get your own saline for the home remedy because it is impossible for us to send you liquid. The medical tools needed for the home remedy are a syringe, a clip and medicine capsules.
Suggestions for Resistant Urethritis Treatment
Treat As Early As Possible
Urethritis can lead to serious complications if mistreated, and these complications are "incurable" with western medical science, so it should be treated as early as possible.
Sufficient Dosage
Make sure the dosage is strong enough to contain the infection. Exercise increases blood circulation and enhances the efficacy of antibiotics.
Rotation of Antibiotics
Usually, after two weeks of treatment, you should notice the reduction of pain and symptoms. If the pain and symptoms are more and less the same as pre-treatment, it is advised to change to other type of antibiotics. Do not use a particular type of antibiotics for long time if you find no sign of reduction of pain and symptoms. The golden time for urethritis is only a few weeks, so you cannot afford to wait for too long.
Extended Treatment Duration
If you see the reduction of symptoms during treatment, do not stop taking medication early. An extended treatment duration makes sure there is less risk of recurrence. Generally speaking, two weeks of antibiotics for urethritis is not enough.
Take Urethral Perfusion for Resistant Urethritis
Urethritis is a lot simpler to treat than prostatitis or epididymitis, so it is critical to cure urethritis by all means when the infection is still contained in urethra. Urethral perfusion is another home remedy to enhance the efficacy. It can be used in conjunction with oral antibiotics. If done early and properly, urethritis won't develop into epididymitis and prostatitis.
Urethritis in Men
Diagnosis of Urethritis
Urethritis is the urethral inflammation from infection, and it is primarily a sexually acquired disease. Urethritis can be diagnosed if any of the following are present:
- Mucopurulent or purulent discharge from urethral meatus.
- Gram stain of urethral smear showing >5 white blood cells per high power field. This is the preferred test as it is rapid, highly sensitive and specific for both nonspecific urethritis and gonorrhea in asymptomatic men.
Classification of Male Urethritis
- Gonococcal urethritis - caused by gonorrhea.
- Nongonococcal urethritis (NGU) - caused by organisms other than gonorrhoea.
- Persistent or recurrent urethritis - caused by NGU, Chlamydia, Mycoplasma, Ureaplasma and Trichomonas.
Symptoms of Urethritis
In men:
- Blood in the urine or semen
- Urinary urgency and frequency
- Discharge from penis
- Itching, tenderness, or swelling in penis or groin area
- Fever (rare)
- Pain with intercourse or ejaculation
- Burning pain while urinating (dysuria)
In women:
- Frequent or urgent urination
- Vaginal discharge
- Fever and chills
- Burning pain while urinating
- Pelvic pain
- Abdominal pain