Chronic pelvic pain is ongoing discomfort in the lower abdomen, bladder area or perineum lasting months. In urology it can arise from the prostate (chronic prostatitis / chronic pelvic pain syndrome in men), the bladder, the pelvic floor, or other sources, and it often overlaps with urinary symptoms.
Persistent pelvic, bladder or perineal pain can have several urological causes and is often frustrating to pin down. Smile Urology in Seomyeon, Busan takes chronic pelvic pain seriously, investigating methodically and treating the cause.
Chronic pelvic pain is ongoing discomfort in the lower abdomen, bladder area or perineum lasting months. In urology it can arise from the prostate (chronic prostatitis / chronic pelvic pain syndrome in men), the bladder, the pelvic floor, or other sources, and it often overlaps with urinary symptoms.
It can be difficult to diagnose, which is exactly why a methodical, patient evaluation matters rather than a quick label.
Accurate testing guides accurate care. Many patients are assessed and started on treatment the same day.
A careful review of the pain pattern, triggers and urinary symptoms.
Testing looks for infection and inflammation as contributors.
Imaging and examination assess the prostate, bladder and pelvic structures.
Because causes overlap, we investigate methodically rather than guessing.
Infection, prostatitis or bladder conditions are treated specifically where found.
Where muscle tension contributes, targeted measures help.
A combination approach to reduce pain and urinary symptoms over time.
We are candid that chronic pelvic pain often needs patience and a combination of measures.
Chronic pelvic pain is taken seriously and investigated methodically here rather than dismissed or over-treated — an approach that suits a condition with overlapping causes. English-speaking support helps keep a long, sometimes frustrating process clearly explained.
Because several conditions — prostate, bladder, pelvic floor — can cause similar pain and often overlap. A methodical evaluation is the way through.
Often, yes — chronic prostatitis / chronic pelvic pain syndrome is a common cause in men, which we assess specifically.
Many people improve with a combination of treatments over time. We are honest that it can take patience rather than a single quick fix.
We assess bladder-centred pain including features of interstitial cystitis and manage it or refer as appropriate.