In daily life, many men sometimes experience dull abdominal pain. Sometimes this pain only lasts for a period of time. When the pain is gone, many people forget about this problem and do not take any treatment. This is wrong. When dull abdominal pain occurs, it may be caused by a cold or some disease. Scenario 1 The most common cause of lower abdominal pain is prostatitis, which often occurs in young people. Symptoms include lower abdominal distension and pain, frequent urination at night, urinary frequency, urgency, and pain when urinating. Case 2 Common symptoms of acute pancreatitis are severe and persistent upper abdominal or left upper abdominal pain (sometimes the pain extends to the back), nausea and vomiting, and fever. The pain is slightly relieved when the body bends forward. Scenario 3 Ureteral stones can also cause lower abdominal pain, which is often accompanied by lumbar paraspinal pain or back pain, paroxysmal colic, submicroscopic hematuria, and ureteral caliber pain. Scenario 4 Acute gastroenteritis is also a cause of lower abdominal pain in men: most cases are caused by food poisoning due to eating unclean food, usually accompanied by severe vomiting, diarrhea, fever and other symptoms. Scenario 5 Abdominal pain is often caused by prostatitis. The lower abdomen is where the prostate gland is located. Some symptoms of prostatitis include lower abdominal distension and pain, frequent urination at night, frequent urination, urgent urination, painful urination, weak urination, white urine after urination, incomplete urination, and bifurcated urine. If you feel lower abdominal distension and pain now, the prostate gland itself will cause lower abdominal distension and pain. Go to the hospital as soon as possible to see if there is a problem with the prostate gland, or do a prostate fluid analysis, or do a B-ultrasound. Scenario 6 Kidney stones: Kidney stones fall down and get stuck in the ureter, causing severe pain. Usually on both sides of the waist, sometimes radiating downward to the bladder, sometimes blood is found in urine. This pain is also a kind of colic, which is very severe and usually can only be relieved after an injection. Case 7 Inflammation of the bladder or stones: When stones get stuck in the urethra, it can cause severe pain in the bladder, urethral pain when urinating, and even hematuria. If the bladder is infected with bacteria, there will also be pain in the same area, but the pain is milder and is usually accompanied by a burning sensation when urinating. A urine test may reveal an increase in white blood cells. |
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