Jacob Teitelbaum - Stopping Pain and Fatigue
Jacob Teitelbaum, M.D., is director of the Practitioners Alliance Network and author of the popular free Smart Phone app “Cures A-Z,” and of many books including From Fatigued to Fantastic!, Pain Free 1-2-3, the Beat Sugar Addiction NOW! series, Real Cause, Real Cure, and The Fatigue and Fibromyalgia Solution. Dr. Teitelbaum does frequent media appearances including Good Morning America, CNN, Fox News Channel, The Dr Oz Show and Oprah & Friends. His website: www.EndFatigue.com
Tags: chronic fatigue | pain | prostatitis | dr. teitelbaum
OPINION

Dealing With Male Pelvic Pain

Jacob Teitelbaum, M.D. By Thursday, 29 August 2024 04:24 PM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

Pelvic pain is common in the public in general, but especially common in those with chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia. Unfortunately, many patients are embarrassed to bring these up at their doctor visits and even when they do, physicians are often unfamiliar with these problems.

Even in the absence of a full blown attack of prostatitis, which is usually not subtle and is easily diagnosed and treated, prostate pain is fairly common in men. When no infection is found, it is called prostadynia, also known as chronic nonbacterial prostatitis, or chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS).

Unfortunately, when doctors do not know what is causing a problem, we often presume it must be psychological. This is what has occurred with prostadynia.

I suspect that prostadynia often occurs because of subtle infections don't show on standard tests for infection. These commonly includes fungal infections and/or other slow growing antibiotic sensitive infections. In the latter case, the prostate is mildly boggy (indents like a ripe fruit) instead of firm and is tender on examination; to the patient without prostate problems it normally feels like one has to pee, but the prostate is not tender or painful when pressed.

Unfortunately, most doctors consider such an exam normal despite you're having prostate symptoms. These symptoms include urinary urgency without there necessarily being much urine present, and a burning sensation when you urinate. The discomfort is often felt on the tip of the penis. Because the infection is not overt, most doctors offer no treatment.

My suspicion is that this is indeed an infectious problem in many cases. My experience has been that patients also improve with antibiotics and antifungals that do not lower estrogen. Treatment needs to be given for many months, because anti-infectious agents have difficulty getting into the prostate. Medications that help urine flow in prostate enlargement (called alpha blockers; e.g., Flomax), also help prostadynia when combined with the antibiotics.

Quercetin 500 mg twice a day also decreases prostate symptoms in both prostadynia and prostatitis. In one study, 30 men with severe prostadynia lasting an average of 11 years were treated with either quercetin 500 mg twice a day or a placebo for one month. There was an average 37 percent decrease in symptoms with over two thirds of patients feeling they gained a meaningful benefit.  

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JacobTeitelbaum
Pelvic pain is common in the public in general, but especially common in those with chronic fatigue and fibromyalgia.
chronic fatigue, pain, prostatitis, dr. teitelbaum
382
2024-24-29
Thursday, 29 August 2024 04:24 PM
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