You have urethritis. This is swelling (inflammation) in the urethra. The urethra is the tube between the bladder and the tip of the penis. Urine drains out of the body through the urethra. Urethritis has both infectious and noninfectious causes. It is most often caused by gonorrhea, chlamydia, or both. The cause of your infection is gonorrhea. This is a sexually transmitted infection (STI).
With male urethritis, there often are symptoms within a week after infection. But they can take up to a month to show up. Symptoms can include:
- Burning or pain when urinating.
- Irritation in the penis.
- Pus discharge from the penis.
- Pain and possible swelling in one or both testicles.
When the infection is also in other areas, it can cause:
- Rectal pain and discharge.
- Throat infections.
- Eye infections (conjunctivitis).
If not treated, your infection can get worse. It can spread to other parts of your body. It can also cause rashes, arthritis, and infections in your joints, heart, and brain.
Gonorrhea needs to be treated with antibiotics. This is important, so it does not get worse and spread. It is contagious. You need treatment so you don't give it to someone else. If you give it to a woman, it can cause pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) and infertility.
People can have gonorrhea without symptoms. So your sexual partners also need to be treated, even if they have no symptoms. If they are not treated, and you keep having sex with them, you will be infected again. Your sexual partners should contact their own doctor or go to an urgent care clinic or the public health department to be checked and treated.