Bladder Obstruction due to BPH can cause weak stream, dribbling, and burning pain. Understand the signs, causes, and next steps.

Chand Parkash’s inputs suggests the prostate is mildly enlarged at 28 grams, and the median lobe is bulging a bit into the urine passage. This can make urine flow weak, cause dribbling, and sometimes lead to a feeling that the bladder is not emptying fully.
The burning pain usually means there is inflammation or irritation somewhere in the urine passage or prostate. It does not automatically mean a severe stage of prostatitis; it can happen with prostatitis, urine infection, or irritation from blocked urine flow.
A prostate size of 28 grams does not tell us the exact “stage” of prostatitis. Staging depends more on symptoms, urine tests, and sometimes examination than on prostate size alone.
There is no fixed “normal amount” of urine discharge below normal in such cases. What doctors usually look for is:
-
weak stream,
-
difficulty starting urine,
-
dribbling after urination,
-
and leftover urine in the bladder after passing urine.
So, in simple words, this looks more like mild prostate enlargement with possible inflammation or obstruction, rather than a clearly defined prostatitis stage. If Chand person has fever, severe pain, blood in urine, or cannot pass urine, he should see a doctor quickly.
For bladder outlet obstruction from mild BPH, the homeopathic remedies most often matched by rubric-based symptom patterns are Causticum, Chimaphila, Lycopodium, Thuja, Sabal serrulata, Clematis, Staphysagria, Pulsatilla, and Apis. In the material you cited, the strongest rubric-style match for weak stream, unsatisfactory emptying, heaviness, and obstructive urinary symptoms is usually Causticum, while Chimaphila and Lycopodium are also common candidates when retention and slow urine flow dominate.

Homeopathy Remedies for Bladder Obstruction due to BPH
Rubric pattern
-
Causticum: weak or incomplete urination, dribbling, unsatisfactory emptying, pressure after urination, cough/sneeze leakage.
-
Chimaphila: enlarged prostate with retention, frequent urging, pelvic pressure, soreness worse sitting.
-
Lycopodium: slow to start, pressure during/after urination, bloating/gas, late-afternoon weakness.
-
Thuja: frequent urge, burning near bladder neck, dribbling, divided stream.
-
Sabal serrulata: frequent night urination, difficulty passing urine, sense of coldness in sexual organs.
-
Clematis: urine comes slowly, in drops, with dribbling afterward.
-
Staphysagria: burning in urethra, especially when urine is not flowing, with retention.
-
Pulsatilla/Apis: more pain-discomfort centered, depending on the exact modality and character of burning.
Boericke/Kent-style note
In the Boericke/Kent-style clinical picture, the choice is usually driven by the quality of the urinary complaint rather than prostate size itself. For example, Causticum is favored when there is unfinished, unsatisfactory urination; Lycopodium when there is obstructive hesitation with abdominal gas and weakness; and Thuja when there is dribbling, divided stream, and urethral burning.
Important clinical caution
A 28 g prostate with a median lobe suggests mild BPH with possible outlet obstruction, but it does not confirm a homeopathic remedy by itself. If there is fever, severe burning, acute retention, blood in urine, or worsening pain, the case needs medical/urologic assessment first because infection or significant obstruction may be present
