Our website is consistently popular due to its wealth of useful content. We are constantly developing it. We have prepared a free educational survey for you – it is aimed at:
- Healthcare professionals treating pelvic pain and familiar with the most common problems and symptoms in patients with chronic prostatitis and abacterial prostatitis
- Patients experiencing pelvic pain or urinary/sexual symptoms.
By browsing the survey pages below, you will learn about various problems related to pelvic floor pain.
The survey was developed to present chronic pelvic pain and abacterial prostatitis from a modern, multidimensional perspective – integrating neurological, muscular, immunological, vascular, psychophysiological, and other mechanisms.
The survey is a structured, mechanism-based questionnaire that analyzes symptoms, triggers, and treatment responses to identify likely causes of chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS). It helps distinguish between various underlying factors, such as pelvic floor muscle dysfunction, nerve hypersensitivity, inflammation, vascular issues, and gut-related factors. Based on the responses, the questionnaire provides a better understanding of the patient's condition and suggests treatment options that may be most appropriate for them.
Link to the Survey: https://www.surveyhero.com/c/3ixzzkns

If you don't have time to do the survey but would still like to see what it looks like, here is a PDF of the survey contents (280KB).
Detailed Survey Guide
We have also prepared a highly detailed, 150-page survey description, presenting a multidisciplinary approach to the mechanisms of chronic pelvic pain syndrome, abacterial prostatitis in men, and their phenotyping.
Link to the Guide: UCPPS Survey Description (PDF 1MB)
New case history, 2026
We have a very detailed case history of a 55-year-old patient with CPPS, whose wife is a physician. According to this description, his condition began in a very mild form at the age of 22. It became more severe after the age of 48. After a thorough diagnosis and treatment with medication and physical therapy, the patient is now leading a normal life. His struggle with the disease is described in detail, including diagnostic tests, medications, physical therapy he underwent between the ages of 20 and 55, and the medications he is currently taking. It also describes the specialists he consulted to rule out various types of CPPS. Now the patient knows which type of CPPS he suffers from and which medications he should take.
Link to the Case History: UCPPS patient's Case History (PDF 80KB)
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