Prostate issues explained: symptoms, screening, and treatments guide

TL;DR:
- Three main prostate problems are BPH, prostatitis, and cancer.
- See a doctor for weak flow, blood in urine, fever, or bone pain.
- PSA testing is a choice for most men 55 to 69.
- Lifestyle, pills, and procedures can ease BPH symptoms fast.
- Most prostate cancers grow slowly, but early care improves outcomes.
What this guide covers
This is a simple, global guide to common prostate issues. It covers benign prostatic hyperplasia, prostatitis, and prostate cancer. It explains symptoms, tests, and treatments that most men will encounter. It also notes when to seek urgent care.
Prostate problems rise with age. Many men over 50 notice urinary changes. These can be annoying, but often respond to simple steps. Some problems need quick medical care. Others need a plan you review each year.
Prostate basics
The prostate is a small gland below the bladder. It wraps around the urethra, the tube that carries urine. Changes in the gland can affect urination and sexual function. Enlargement does not always mean cancer. BPH is a noncancerous growth that is very common after midlife. MedlinePlus confirms that BPH is not cancer and does not raise cancer risk.
The three big categories
1) Benign prostatic hyperplasia, or BPH
What it is. Noncancerous growth of the prostate that can squeeze the urethra. Very common after 50.
Symptoms. Slow stream, hesitancy, dribbling, urgency, frequent night urination, and the feeling you did not empty. Call a doctor fast if you cannot pass urine at all.
Diagnosis. History, symptom scores, digital rectal exam, urinalysis, and sometimes PSA. An ultrasound or flow test may be used. Your clinician will rule out infection or strictures first. Care follows guideline paths from the American Urological Association.
First-line treatments.
- Lifestyle: reduce evening fluids, limit alcohol and caffeine, double voiding, timed voids.
- Medicines: alpha blockers relax muscle to improve flow, often within days. 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors shrink the prostate over months and lower the risk of retention. Combination pills help men with larger glands. Your doctor will review side effects, such as dizziness or sexual changes. These options are standard in urology guidelines.
Office procedures and surgery.
- Office options target tissue to widen the channel, with shorter recovery.
- Surgical options include transurethral resection, laser procedures, and enucleation for very large glands. Choice depends on prostate size, bleeding risk, and your goals. The AUA details effectiveness and risks for each method.
2) Prostatitis
What it is. Inflammation or infection of the prostate. It presents as several syndromes. These include acute bacterial, chronic bacterial, and chronic pelvic pain syndrome without infection. The U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases explains these types and risk factors.
Symptoms.
- Acute bacterial prostatitis: fever, chills, pelvic or perineal pain, painful urination, and sometimes urinary retention. This is urgent and needs antibiotics.
- Chronic bacterial prostatitis: repeated urinary infections with pelvic discomfort.
- Chronic pelvic pain syndrome: pelvic pain for at least three months, often with urinary or sexual symptoms, without a clear infection.
Diagnosis. History, exam, urinalysis, and urine culture. Doctors may avoid vigorous prostate massage in acute infection because it can worsen symptoms. Management varies by type.
Treatment.
- Acute bacterial: targeted antibiotics and supportive care. Hospital care if very unwell.
- Chronic bacterial: longer antibiotic courses and relapse prevention.
- Chronic pelvic pain syndrome: a mix of options. These can include pelvic floor therapy, pain control, alpha blockers, and stress reduction. Care is tailored and may involve urology and pelvic physiotherapy.
3) Prostate cancer
How common it is. In 2022, prostate cancer ranked second in men worldwide by new cases. It ranked fourth across both sexes. Data come from the International Agency for Research on Cancer.
Risk factors. Age is the strongest factor. Family history and certain inherited mutations raise risk. Black men have higher risk and worse outcomes in many regions, due to both biology and care gaps. WHO notes global cancer growth driven by aging and lifestyle factors.
Symptoms to know. Early prostate cancer often has no symptoms. Advanced disease can cause bone pain, weight loss, and urinary changes. Never wait if you see blood in urine or semen. Get checked if you have persistent back or hip pain.
Screening, simply put. The PSA blood test and a digital rectal exam are the usual tools. For men aged 55 to 69, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force advises a personal decision after discussing benefits and harms. It advises against routine PSA screening at age 70 and older. These recommendations remain the current stance on the USPSTF site as of October 13, 2025. The U.S. National Cancer Institute summary matches this approach.
What happens after a high PSA. Doctors may repeat PSA, check for infection, and consider MRI before biopsy. If cancer is found, many early cases qualify for active surveillance. Others need surgery, radiation, or systemic therapy. The NCCN 2025 patient guidelines explain options and follow-up in plain language.
Quick symptom checker
Use this list to decide on next steps. This is not a diagnosis tool.
Situation | What to do |
Cannot pass urine | Go to urgent care or emergency care today |
Fever with pelvic pain or burning urine | See a doctor today, possible acute prostatitis |
Weak flow, dribbling, frequent night trips | Book a primary care or urology visit |
Blood in urine or semen | Seek urgent assessment |
Bone pain with weight loss | See a doctor promptly |
No symptoms but age 55 to 69 | Ask about PSA screening and your risk profile |
Tests your doctor may order
- Urinalysis and culture to rule out infection.
- PSA blood test to assess risk and track changes.
- Ultrasound or MRI to estimate prostate size and look for lesions.
- Uroflow and post-void residual to gauge obstruction.
- Biopsy only when indicated after shared decision making.
These tests align with standard urology and cancer guidelines.
Treatment paths by goal
If your main goal is better flow
Start with lifestyle changes and an alpha blocker. Add a 5-alpha-reductase inhibitor if your prostate is large and symptoms persist. Consider a procedure if medicines fail or cause side effects. AUA guidance supports this stepped approach.
If your main problem is pelvic pain
Your team will confirm or rule out infection. For chronic pelvic pain syndrome, expect a plan that blends medicines, pelvic floor therapy, and stress care. One size does not fit all.
If you were told you have early prostate cancer
Ask if active surveillance fits your case. Many low-risk cancers grow slowly. Surveillance uses PSA, MRI, and periodic biopsies. If you need treatment, surgery and radiation have strong long-term data. The right choice depends on stage, grade, age, and your values. The NCCN patient guides outline paths in clear terms.
Screening decisions in plain language
PSA testing can find cancer early. It can also find slow cancers that may never cause harm. For many men 55 to 69, a one-on-one talk is the best path. Men 70 and older usually skip routine PSA testing. Exceptions exist, for example very healthy older men with long life expectancy. Review your family history and ethnicity, then decide with your clinician. This reflects the USPSTF and NCI summaries.
Everyday steps that help
- Keep a healthy weight and stay active.
- Limit evening fluids if night trips bother you.
- Reduce alcohol and caffeine, which can irritate the bladder.
- Avoid decongestants for long periods if they worsen flow.
- Manage constipation, which can worsen urinary symptoms.
These steps support symptom control and are safe for most people. Discuss any new plan with your doctor.
When to seek care now
Seek urgent care for fever with pelvic or perineal pain, trouble passing urine, or blood in urine. Do not wait for symptoms to pass. Acute bacterial prostatitis needs prompt antibiotics to prevent complications.
Global burden, in context
Prostate cancer counted about 1.47 million new cases in 2022. It ranked second among men and fourth overall. With aging populations, cases may rise further. Health systems should plan for earlier detection and better access to treatment. Data come from IARC and WHO reports.
Why it matters
Urinary symptoms affect sleep, mood, and work. The right care can restore control and reduce worry. Early attention also prevents emergencies like urinary retention or infection. For cancer, informed screening and timely treatment can improve survival while avoiding overtreatment. That balance is the goal.
Talk with your clinician using this checklist
- My main symptom and how long it has lasted.
- Any fever, blood in urine, bone pain, or weight loss.
- All medicines and supplements I take.
- My family history of prostate or breast cancer.
- My goals for treatment, from symptom relief to cancer risk.
- Whether PSA testing fits my age and risk today.
Sources:
- MedlinePlus, Enlarged Prostate, https://medlineplus.gov/enlargedprostatebph.html, 2023-12-15
- NIDDK, Prostatitis, https://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/urologic-diseases/prostate-problems/prostatitis-inflammation-prostate, 2025-08-13
- USPSTF, Prostate Cancer Screening, https://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/uspstf/recommendation/prostate-cancer-screening, 2018-05-08
- NCI Progress Report, Prostate Cancer Screening, https://progressreport.cancer.gov/detection/prostate_cancer, accessed 2025-10-13
- NCCN Guidelines for Patients, Prostate Cancer, Version 2.2025, https://www.nccn.org/patients/guidelines/content/PDF/prostate-early-patient.pdf, 2025
- IARC GLOBOCAN, World fact sheet 2022, https://gco.iarc.who.int/media/globocan/factsheets/populations/900-world-fact-sheet.pdf, 2025-05