enlarged prostate
#26
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2 extremely informative/helpful PCa Forums
https://www.inspire.com/groups/zero-prostate-cancer/
https://healthunlocked.com/
https://www.inspire.com/groups/zero-prostate-cancer/
https://healthunlocked.com/
#27
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Join Date: May 2017
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My Two Cents...
Wildwood, FWIW, I was in your shoes a few years ago, mainly a biopsy of Gleason 6 from a TRUS biopsy. I chose Active surveillance and a year later had a MRI which revealed a Pirads 4 tumor. A subsequent targeted biopsy came back with a G3+4 sample/core as read by a local pathologist. My urologist immediately wanted to do a radical prostatectomy. I asked that my pathology be repeated by Johns Hopkins, who downgraded the G7 to G6 , and back to active surveillance I went. Fast forward to this year where another MRI and biopsy couldn't find any cancer.
What I'm getting at is if I had just blindly listened to my former urologist, I would have entered treatment unnecessarily and potentially endured the inherent side-effects of treatment. I will remain on active surveillance and God willing, keep my prostate (as annoying as it is). I will say that I hate the biopsies, but am with a Dr. now that performs them using a transperineal approach to limit sepsis risk.
If you do decide to have treatment, please look into the websites that Old Try Guy has posted. He gave me great advice when I entered the prostate industrial complex, and now I know of focal treatments, such as TULSA-PRO, which are less invasive and can have less risk to urinary and sexual function.
What I'm getting at is if I had just blindly listened to my former urologist, I would have entered treatment unnecessarily and potentially endured the inherent side-effects of treatment. I will remain on active surveillance and God willing, keep my prostate (as annoying as it is). I will say that I hate the biopsies, but am with a Dr. now that performs them using a transperineal approach to limit sepsis risk.
If you do decide to have treatment, please look into the websites that Old Try Guy has posted. He gave me great advice when I entered the prostate industrial complex, and now I know of focal treatments, such as TULSA-PRO, which are less invasive and can have less risk to urinary and sexual function.
Last edited by BlackForestTerp; 03-01-22 at 10:23 PM.
#28
Newbie
I'm 79 and have had elevated PSA for years. Had all the tests and negative. My Urologist told me last week that we can forget about the psa tests from now on. Over the years we only watched for any big variances in the psa numbers, that could indicate a problem. I never had a biopsy since I had seen problems caused by them. I have had urologist that almost demanded a biopsy and I declined. I stuck to the monitoring over the years and so far it looks like it worked. In my opinion, at least in the past, urology is not a perfect science. My advise is to take things with a little grain of salt and find a good urologist that's not surgery happy.
#29
Grupetto Bob
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In my 40s started developing urinary urgency issues. Went an saw a urologist that put me through the ringer and diagnosed a semi-enlarged prostate. The more I rode the worse it became. Traveled out of the country for about a month (no bike riding) and the issue resolved itself. Got back on the bike when home and guess what? Yes little Timmy the condition returned. The only reprieve I get from the issue is when I am sick and can’t ride, and then back it comes once I am on the bike. No relationship? Yeah, it must be all in my head.
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