Can traditional Chinese medicine treat benign prostatic hyperplasia
summary
Recently, I always feel that I have no energy and no price. At first, I thought it was because the weather was too hot. But now I always want to go to the toilet at night, and I can't urinate. There is a little pain below. After washing, I still feel pain. The hospital said that it is prostatic hyperplasia. The doctor treated me, and the symptoms have been alleviated. Can traditional Chinese medicine treat prostatic hyperplasia? Now let's talk about whether traditional Chinese medicine can treat benign prostatic hyperplasia.
Can traditional Chinese medicine treat benign prostatic hyperplasia
Treatment 1: laser therapy of benign prostatic hyperplasia, laser has coagulation, coking and gasification effect on soft tissue. This method uses the high energy density of laser, which can make the temperature reach 400 ℃ - 1000 ℃ instantly, to burn and vaporize the local tissue rapidly. This method is easy to operate, no bleeding, less postoperative complications and definite curative effect. Now it has been widely used in clinic.
Treatment 2: injection therapy of benign prostatic hyperplasia, the application of sclerosing agent directly injected into the prostate through perineum, so that the prostate tissue aseptic necrosis, so as to reduce the gland, improve the patient's urination symptoms. The main side effects were swelling of the prostate after injection, severe pain, and * complications such as urinary retention or cystitis and urethritis. Injection of sclerosing agent can also cause adhesion between prostate and surrounding tissues, which brings difficulties to future surgery.
Treatment 3: cryotherapy of benign prostatic hyperplasia. Cryotherapy is to produce deep hypothermia (- 160 ℃ ~ - 180 ℃) in the local area of the prostate, dehydrate the prostate tissue, cause local small vasospasm, blood flow stagnation, thrombosis, so as to cause ischemia, hypoxia, necrosis and abscission of the tissue. This therapy is simple, safe and reliable, and can be used for patients who cannot tolerate open surgery.
matters needing attention
I also want to emphasize that patients with chronic urinary tract obstruction, whose renal function is obviously impaired, patients with severe urinary tract infection or acute urinary retention, should first indwelling catheter to relieve obstruction, * be controlled after infection, and then undergo surgery after renal function recovery. If it is difficult to insert the catheter or the long time of intubation has caused urethritis, suprapubic cystostomy can be performed instead. The indications of emergency prostatectomy should be strictly controlled.