Bening Prostatic Hypertropha

Lower urinary tract symptoms can be divided into storage, voiding, and post-micturition symptoms, and they are prevalent, cause bother and impair QoL.

An increasing awareness of LUTS and storage symptoms in particular, is warranted to discuss management options that could increase QoL. Lower urinary tract symptoms are strongly associated with ageing, associated costs and burden are therefore likely to increase with future demographic changes.

Lower urinary tract symptoms are also associated with a number of modifiable risk factors, suggesting potential targets for prevention (e.g. metabolic syndrome). In addition, men with moderate-to-severe LUTS may have an increased risk of major adverse cardiac events. Most elderly men have at least one LUTS; however, symptoms are often mild or not very bothersome.

Lower urinary tract symptoms can progress dynamically: for some individuals LUTS persist and progress over long time periods, and for others they remit. Lower urinary tract symptoms have traditionally been related to bladder outlet obstruction (BOO), most frequently when histological BPH progresses through benign prostatic enlargement (BPE) to BPO. However, increasing numbers of studies have shown that LUTS are often unrelated to the prostate. Bladder dysfunction may also cause LUTS, including detrusor overactivity/OAB, detrusor underactivity (DU)/underactive bladder (UAB), as well as other structural or functional abnormalities of the urinary tract and its surrounding tissues. Prostatic inflammation also appears to play a role in BPH pathogenesis and progression. In addition, many non-urological conditions also contribute to urinary symptoms, especially nocturia. The definitions of the most common conditions related to male LUTS are presented below: