

Treatment
Prognosis of Prostatitis
Mycoplasma/Ureaplasma Infection vs Chlamydia/Bacteria/Yeast Infection
Prostatitis with Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma infections are much difficult to treat than infections involving Chlamydia, bacteria and yeast.
Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma don't react well to most antibiotics and are very stealthy and difficult to get rid of them.
There are also some traits of Mycoplasma and Ureaplasma that make it very difficult for antibiotics to work well on them. The complicated prostate structure is a natural protection and breeding ground for them to grow and resist prostatitis treatments.
Bacteria are susceptible to our prostatitis treatment as we could easily observe the differences from previous prostatitis patients and their reaction to our treatment. The lab tests on bacteria are quick to show the absence of bacteria.
The following Information describes more in details:
Mycoplasma, Chlamydia and ureaplasma cannot be killed by most antibiotics execpt tetracyclines or erythromycins, as most antibiotics work by damaging a bacteria's cell wall.
If all aboratory tests and cultures fail to reveal a cause, you could be infected with any of these bacteria. taking long-acting erythromycin or tetracyclines for several weeks, months or years is the ony way to get a cure.
Venereal diseases, muscle and joint pains, burning in the stomach, a chronic cough, and chronic fatigue are comon cause.
myelitis (paralysis of the spine)
chronic sore throat
gall stones
red itchy eyes
pain on looking at light and blindness
kidney stones
; testicular pain
strokes
high blood pressure
belly pain
muscle pain
chronic fatigue
nasal polyps
asthma
cerebral palsy
premature birth
WHY THEY ARE SO DIFFICULT TO DIAGNOSE AND TREAT:
Without a laboratory test that indicates a specific infection, most doctors are not able to prescribe antibiotics to patients . Currently there is no dependable test is available to identify chlamydia, mycoplasma or ureaplasma infections. Only certain antibiotics taken for a long time could kill these organisms but most antibiotics don't
Many infected people do not take medication long enough so that the microorganisms are completely gone and cure is possible, or they reinfected their sex partners. It is extraordinarily difficult to cure and often require treatment for many months once these infections persist for a long time.
If you treat early and receive treatment when you have local symptoms, your chances for a cure are high. If after some time, the infection can spread to other parts of your body and have a lot of symptoms that make you sick or damage nerves, joints and muscles.
Many cases that women who still had chlamydia one month after treatment were reinfected by new or old partners.
symptoms from chlamydia, ureaplasma and mycoplasma
urinate all the time,
vaginal itching, itchy eyes

