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العنوان
Causative organisms of bacterial prostatitis in erectile dysfunction patients /
المؤلف
Hashem, Eslam Hamed Abas Mohammed.
هيئة الاعداد
باحث / إسلام حامد عباس محمد هاشم
مشرف / سمير محمد الحنبلى
مشرف / محمد فوزي الكامل
مشرف / دعاء توفيق مسلات
مناقش / سمير محمد الحنبلى
الموضوع
Prostatitis. Bacterial diseases.
تاريخ النشر
2017.
عدد الصفحات
94 p. :
اللغة
الإنجليزية
الدرجة
ماجستير
التخصص
الأمراض الجلدية
تاريخ الإجازة
01/03/2017
مكان الإجازة
جامعة المنصورة - كلية الطب - Department Dermatology, Andrology& STDs
الفهرس
Only 14 pages are availabe for public view

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Abstract

1- المقدمة : Erectile dysfunction (ED), is the most common cause of sexual dysfunction that affects the quality of life. ED prevalence in Egypt is 13.2% of population. ED is defined as inability to attain or maintain an erection sufficient for sexual performance. Prostatitis hits around 10-14% of men of all ages and racial origin. Nearly 50% of men at some point in their life complain from this condition.
. 2-الغرض من البحث: Aim of the work is to identify causative organisms of bacterial prostatitis in erectile dysfunction patients.
. 3-الطرق المستخدمة The study was done on 120 ED patients attending to the Andrology outpatient clinic. we did expressed prostatic secretion by segmental-culture technique. Culture for three samples. Bacterial prostatitis is confirmed by the presence of bacteria in the EPS and in the VB2 in numbers greatly exceeding (10- folds increase) the bacteria counts of the VB1 urine specimens.
4-النتائج : The prevalence of CBP in ED was 19.2 %. PE showed high statistically significant difference in our study between ED patients with CBP (82.6%) and ED patient without CBP (26.8%), also The prevalence of CBP in patients with PE was 43.4%. The gram positive bacteria (54.5 %) were common than the gram negative bacteria (45.5 %). In the present study, E.coli was the commonest clinical isolate (39.1 %) that cause CBP in ED patients followed by S. aureus and E. fecalis (each accounted for 21.7 %), then C. seminale (8.7 %) and finally K. pneumoniae and Ch. Trachomatis (each accounted for 4.3 %).