Sexual Health
Pain during sexual intercourse is mostly inflammation and requires timely treatment at the hospital
Sexual pain is often caused by inflammation, and many people believe it is just a female sensation. In fact, in clinical practice, it is also common for men to experience pain from various reasons during sexual activity.
Male sexual pain usually includes stinging pain in the glans or foreskin during intercourse, inguinal colic during ejaculation, pain in the perineum and lumbosacral region after ejaculation, and burning pain in the urethra during urination after ejaculation. The causes and nature of so much pain are different. During sexual intercourse, pricking pain in the glans penis or foreskin may be caused by excessive foreskin, insufficient lubrication of the partner's vagina, strong traction, short frenulum of the foreskin, and painful inflammation of the glans penis or foreskin caused by traction injury. This type of sexual pain can be prevented and treated, and circumcision or frenulum shaping surgery can solve the problem by treating inflammation in both parties. Ejaculatory pain is mainly related to reproductive tract infections and inflammation, such as prostatitis and seminal vesiculitis. Obstruction of stones and congenital obstruction in the ejaculatory duct can also cause ejaculatory pain. The former can be alleviated by controlling infection, while the latter can be cured through surgery.
Mild and transient discomfort in the perineum and lumbosacral region after male ejaculation is not uncommon, and many can be relieved on their own. Only severe and prolonged pain is considered pathological. Inflammation of reproductive tract infections, (Pelvic floor muscle ligament congestion, inflammation, etc. Usually anti-inflammatory and analgesic drugs can be used, as well as physical therapy. Many men urinate after ejaculation and experience fine urine and burning pain in the urethra, which usually subsides within a few minutes to tens of minutes. When the pain persists for a long time, the possibility of infection and inflammation in the urethra or anterior glands should be considered, and corresponding examination and treatment are needed. The cause of penile pain in middle-aged men may be penile sclerosis, caused by the penile membrane It can be caused by changes in sea body fibrosis and can be treated with medication or surgery.