What Medication Should Be Taken for Male Genital Pain?
Male genital pain can be treated with antibiotics such as levofloxacin if caused by bacterial infection. For male genitalia, especially in cases of inflamed foreskin and glans, local cleaning and topical medication are generally recommended. If there is general redness and swelling, scattered red spots on the glans and inner foreskin, it is likely to be caused by bacterial infection. After cleaning with water, erythromycin ointment or aureomycin ointment can be applied. Regularly turning over the foreskin to keep it dry is also recommended.
1. Various traumas, insect bites, pimples, or epidermal traumas.
2. Overindulgence in sexual activity.
3. Skin infections of the genitalia.
4. Prostatitis often causes penile pain, which may be due to infection or irritation of the penis.
5. Urethritis and gonorrhoea mainly cause painful symptoms through sexual transmission.
6. Males who have not undergone circumcision are prone to foreskin infections, known as balanitis, which can cause swelling and pain of the penis.
It is important to distinguish penile pain from the symptoms of Peyronie's disease. Peyronie's disease commonly occurs in middle-aged and older men and can range from mild to severe. Common symptoms of Peyronie's disease include:
① The appearance of painless hard plaques on the penis.
② Bending of the penis, with plaques on the upper side causing upward bending and plaques on the lower side causing downward bending.
③ In some patients, plaques may appear on both the upper and lower sides of the penis, causing shortening and deformation.