Sultan Mohammad Tareen, Abdul Saboor Soomro, Muhammad Mehraiz Khan.
The Prostatic Inflammation Effecton Clinical Examination of patients Whom Undergone Prostate Transurethral Resection (TURP) Due To Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia.
Pak J Med Health Sci Jan ;12(3):1299-302.

Aim: To examine asymptomatic inflammatory prostatitis affects on patients clinical consequences experiencing transurethral resection of the prostate because of prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Method: This retrospective study was carried out during 1st July 2016 to 31st December 2017 at Bolan Medical Complex Hospital, Quetta and included 950 patients during this period. Before and one year after surgery, pathological results and clinical parameters were compared. The patients with lower urinary tract due to benign prostatic hyperplasia admit to urology clinic, over the fifty years of age, without past urologic surgery was included in this study. The patients having +ve urine results, chronic pelvic pain symptoms resulted in accordance with NIH rating, bladder stone, neurological disease, prostate cancer and urethral stenosis were excluded. Results: Six hundred and five patients were identified with only benign prostatic hyperplasia and remaining 345 patients were indentified with both benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and prostatic inflammation (category-IV). Between two groups there was found no statistical significance among limitation/variables comprising prostate volume, post evacuate remnant (p value = >0.05) and age. Prostate inflammation’s patients presenting lower Qmax values and higher pre-operative prostate score as compared to patients had not found inflammation before prostate transurethral resection. Conclusion: In benign prostatic hyperplasia patients, prostate inflammation with no symptoms can cause to deteriorate lower urinary tract symptoms and rate of urinary flow

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