Many of the early warning signs men shouldn’t igam, unexplained discomfort, or a change in erectile function. Because these symptoms can feel embarrassing or easy to dismiss, some men wait months before speaking with a healthcare professional.
That delay can matter. Urological symptoms may be caused by a minor infection or temporary irritation, but they can also point to kidney stones, prostate inflammation, urinary obstruction, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, or cancer.
The purpose of early evaluation is not to assume the worst. It is to identify the cause before a manageable problem becomes painful, expensive, or harder to treat.

Urologist Freya Hollowell Reveals the Early Warning Signs Men Shouldn’t Ignore
Editorial disclosure: Freya Hollowell is an editorial expert persona used to present evidence-based men’s health information. This article is based on guidance from established medical organizations and does not replace personalized care from a licensed clinician.
Early Warning Signs Men Shouldn’t Ignore
Blood in the urine, even when there is no pain
Visible blood in the urine is one of the clearest reasons to arrange a medical evaluation. Urine may look pink, red, rust-colored, or dark brown. In other cases, blood is found only during a laboratory test.
Possible causes include a urinary tract infection, kidney stone, prostate inflammation, injury, vigorous exercise, an enlarged prostate, kidney disease, or a tumor in the urinary system. The National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases explains that hematuria can have both minor and serious causes.
Painless bleeding should not be considered harmless. A lack of pain does not rule out bladder, kidney, or prostate disease. Men who take blood thinners should also report visible blood rather than assuming medication is the only explanation.
A weaker stream or increasing difficulty urinating
Some men gradually become accustomed to waiting longer for urination to begin, straining to empty the bladder, or experiencing a stream that repeatedly stops and starts.
These changes may occur with benign prostate enlargement, prostate inflammation, scar tissue in the urethra, medication effects, nerve problems, or bladder dysfunction. One isolated episode may not require specialist care, but a persistent pattern deserves attention.
Other related symptoms include:
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- feeling that the bladder has not emptied completely;
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- urinating more frequently than usual;
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- waking several times during the night to urinate;
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- leaking after leaving the bathroom;
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- an urgent need to urinate with little warning;
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- recurrent urinary tract infections.
These symptoms are not proof of prostate cancer. In fact, noncancerous prostate enlargement and inflammation are more common explanations. The correct diagnosis depends on age, symptom pattern, medication use, examination findings, and appropriate testing.
The sudden inability to urinate
Being completely unable to urinate despite a full or painful bladder is an emergency. Acute urinary retention can cause severe lower-abdominal pain and may damage the bladder or kidneys if pressure is not relieved.
The NIDDK advises seeking emergency medical treatment when a person suddenly cannot urinate.
Possible triggers include prostate blockage, certain medications, infection, nerve damage, recent surgery, or severe constipation. Emergency treatment commonly involves draining the bladder with a catheter before the underlying cause is investigated.
Burning, discharge, or pain during urination
Burning during urination may result from a bladder infection, urethral inflammation, prostate infection, kidney stone, or sexually transmitted infection. Discharge from the urethra, sores, pelvic discomfort, or recent exposure to infection increases the need for prompt testing.
Men should avoid treating these symptoms with leftover antibiotics. The wrong medication may fail to treat the infection, temporarily reduce symptoms, or make laboratory testing less reliable.
A clinician may order a urinalysis, urine culture, or targeted infection testing. Treatment depends on the organism and the location of the infection.
A new lump, swelling, or heaviness in a testicle
A painless testicular lump is not something to monitor indefinitely at home. Testicular cancer most often affects younger and middle-aged men, and early disease may cause little or no pain.
According to the National Cancer Institute, possible signs include a painless lump or swelling, a change in how a testicle feels, a dull ache in the groin, fluid buildup, or discomfort in the scrotum.
Many testicular lumps are caused by noncancerous conditions such as cysts, inflammation, or enlarged veins. However, a physical examination and scrotal ultrasound are usually needed to determine the difference.
Sudden, severe testicular pain
Severe testicular pain that begins suddenly requires emergency assessment, particularly when accompanied by swelling, nausea, vomiting, or a testicle that appears higher than usual.
One possible cause is testicular torsion, in which the spermatic cord twists and reduces blood supply. Treatment is time-sensitive because prolonged loss of blood flow can permanently damage the testicle.
Sudden pain may also result from infection, injury, a kidney stone, or a hernia. The safest response is urgent evaluation rather than waiting to see whether the pain disappears.
Persistent flank, groin, or lower-abdominal pain
Pain that starts in the side or back and moves toward the groin is commonly associated with kidney stones. Other symptoms may include nausea, vomiting, urinary urgency, or blood in the urine.
Small stones may pass without a procedure, but size, location, infection risk, and kidney function influence treatment. Severe pain, fever, chills, vomiting, or difficulty urinating should prompt urgent care.
Fever combined with urinary obstruction can indicate an infected, blocked urinary system. This is more serious than an uncomplicated stone and may require emergency drainage and intravenous antibiotics.
New or persistent erectile dysfunction
Erectile difficulties are often attributed to stress, aging, or relationship pressure. Those factors can contribute, but a persistent change may also reflect diabetes, hypertension, vascular disease, low testosterone, medication effects, or nerve problems.
The American Urological Association identifies erectile dysfunction as a possible risk marker for cardiovascular disease and other health conditions that may warrant evaluation.
This does not mean every episode predicts heart disease. It means a repeated change in erectile function should be considered within the patient’s broader health profile rather than treated only as an isolated performance issue.
A clinician may review blood pressure, cholesterol, blood glucose, hormone levels, sleep, alcohol use, smoking, mental health, and current medications before recommending treatment.
Penile pain, new curvature, or a noticeable hard area
A penis that gradually develops a curve, painful erections, shortening, or a firm plaque may indicate Peyronie’s disease. Mild natural curvature is common, but a new structural change should be evaluated when it causes pain, interferes with intimacy, or continues to progress.
Treatment options depend on the severity and phase of the condition. They may include observation, prescription therapy, injections, traction devices, or surgery. Products promising to straighten the penis quickly should be viewed cautiously.
Changes associated with fever or unexplained weight loss
Urinary or pelvic symptoms accompanied by fever, chills, weakness, night sweats, or unexplained weight loss require more attention than an isolated mild symptom.
Fever and painful urination may indicate a urinary infection or acute prostatitis. Unexplained weight loss does not automatically indicate cancer, but it should be assessed when combined with persistent pain, bleeding, a mass, or substantial changes in urinary function.
What a Urologist May Test—and What It Can Cost in 2026
The first consultation
A urologist usually begins with a detailed history rather than an immediate procedure. The discussion may cover urinary habits, pain, erectile function, previous infections, family history, prescriptions, supplements, surgeries, smoking, alcohol use, and chronic conditions.
A physical examination may include the abdomen, groin, external genital area, and, when appropriate, the prostate. The clinician then decides which tests are medically justified.
U.S. self-pay prices vary considerably. Published healthcare marketplace examples place a new-patient urology visit at approximately $129 to $318, but hospital-owned clinics, large cities, and complex consultations may charge more. Insurance patients may owe a specialist copay, deductible, or coinsurance.
Urinalysis and urine culture
A urinalysis can identify blood, signs of infection, glucose, protein, and other abnormalities. A urine culture may be added when infection is suspected.
Cash pricing can range from only a few dollars at a retail laboratory to well over $100 when testing is processed through a hospital or bundled with other services. The office visit and laboratory fee may appear as separate charges.
Blood tests
Bloodwork may include kidney function, blood glucose, cholesterol, blood counts, testosterone, or prostate-specific antigen testing when appropriate.
Common self-pay blood tests may cost approximately $29 to $99 per test or panel through retail laboratory services. Hospital laboratory pricing can be substantially higher.
Testing should be selected based on symptoms and risk rather than ordering every available men’s health panel. Large direct-to-consumer packages sometimes include tests that do not change treatment decisions.
Scrotal ultrasound
A scrotal ultrasound is commonly used to evaluate a lump, swelling, injury, persistent pain, or possible interruption of blood flow. It is noninvasive and does not use ionizing radiation.
Self-pay prices may range from several hundred dollars to approximately $1,000 depending on the imaging center and location. Published cash-price marketplaces show some testicular scans in the range of about $500 to $900.
Freestanding imaging centers may cost less than hospital departments, but urgent symptoms should never be delayed solely to search for a cheaper appointment.
Bladder scan, CT imaging, and cystoscopy
A bladder scan can measure how much urine remains after urination. It is often used when retention or incomplete emptying is suspected.
CT imaging may be ordered for kidney stones, bleeding, trauma, or suspected obstruction. Pricing depends on whether contrast is used and whether the scan occurs in an outpatient center or hospital.
Cystoscopy allows a urologist to inspect the urethra and bladder with a small camera. According to the NIDDK, it may be used to evaluate blood in the urine, recurrent infections, urinary retention, pain, or difficulty urinating.
Cystoscopy costs may include separate charges for the physician, facility, pathology, medication, and anesthesia. Patients should request a complete estimate rather than relying on a single quoted procedure fee.
Questions to ask before paying for testing
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- Is this test medically necessary now, or can it wait?
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- Will the test be performed in the office, hospital, or independent imaging center?
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- Is the provider and facility in my insurance network?
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- Does the quoted price include professional and facility fees?
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- Will pathology, anesthesia, or follow-up create additional charges?
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- Is a lower-cost cash price available?
Price matters, but it should be considered alongside urgency, diagnostic quality, clinician experience, and the likelihood that the test will change treatment.
Choosing the Right Urology Care and Knowing When It Is Urgent
Primary care vs. telehealth vs. a urologist
A primary-care clinician can often begin the evaluation of mild urinary symptoms, erectile changes, infection concerns, or general screening questions. This may be the most affordable option for patients who already have an established doctor.
Telehealth can be useful for medication reviews, follow-up care, straightforward infection screening, or uncomplicated erectile dysfunction. Its limitations become more important when symptoms require a physical examination, urine-flow measurement, imaging, or immediate treatment.
A board-certified urologist is usually the best choice for visible blood in the urine, recurrent infections, treatment-resistant symptoms, testicular changes, suspected obstruction, kidney stones, penile curvature, fertility concerns, or surgical decisions.
How to compare top urology providers
The best provider is not necessarily the clinic with the most aggressive advertising. Look for professional credentials, hospital affiliation, experience with the relevant condition, transparent fees, insurance participation, and access to appropriate diagnostic testing.
Patient reviews can provide useful information about appointment delays, communication, billing, and follow-up. Reviews cannot reliably determine whether a clinician recommends evidence-based treatment.
Be cautious when a men’s health clinic immediately recommends expensive hormone programs, shockwave packages, supplements, or procedures before completing a basic medical evaluation.
Symptoms that require emergency care
Seek urgent or emergency medical attention for:
complete inability to urinate, sudden severe testicular pain, heavy urinary bleeding or blood clots, severe flank pain with fever, confusion, repeated vomiting, major genital trauma, or an erection lasting four hours or longer.
These symptoms should not wait for a routine telehealth appointment or the next available specialist visit.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should a man see a doctor after noticing blood in his urine once?
Yes. Visible blood should be medically evaluated even when it occurs only once or causes no pain. Infection and stones are common causes, but more serious urinary conditions must also be considered.
Is waking at night to urinate always a prostate problem?
No. Nighttime urination may be related to fluid intake, sleep apnea, diabetes, medication, bladder dysfunction, prostate enlargement, or other conditions. A persistent change deserves evaluation.
Can erectile dysfunction be an early sign of heart disease?
Persistent erectile dysfunction can be associated with vascular disease and cardiovascular risk factors. It does not confirm heart disease, but it may justify checking blood pressure, cholesterol, glucose, and overall cardiovascular health.
Is a painless testicular lump less serious than a painful one?
Not necessarily. Testicular cancer may present as a painless lump or swelling. Any new testicular mass or significant change should be examined promptly.
How much does a urologist visit cost without insurance?
Published self-pay estimates often range from approximately $129 to $318 for a new-patient office visit, although location, clinic ownership, and complexity can raise the price. Laboratory tests and imaging are usually billed separately.
Can telehealth replace an in-person urology visit?
Telehealth can manage selected uncomplicated concerns and follow-up care. It cannot fully replace an examination or imaging when there is bleeding, a lump, severe pain, urinary retention, trauma, or suspected obstruction.
Conclusion
Many men delay care because they expect symptoms to disappear, fear an uncomfortable examination, or assume a problem is simply part of aging. That approach can turn a treatable condition into an emergency or allow a serious disease to progress unnoticed.
The most important early warning signs men shouldn’t ignore include blood in the urine, sudden testicular pain, a new lump, inability to urinate, persistent changes in urine flow, recurrent burning, unexplained pelvic pain, and new erectile dysfunction.
Seeking an evaluation does not mean committing to expensive testing or treatment. It begins with a conversation, a focused examination, and only the diagnostic services that are medically appropriate.
Early care can provide reassurance when the cause is minor and faster treatment when it is not. In men’s health, paying attention to small changes is often the most practical form of prevention.