Jul
10
NON MAJOR-SURGICAL BPH TREATMENTS
July 10, 2009 | Leave a Comment
NON MAJOR-SURGICAL w5tbpqac7u
BPH TREATMENTS
Remember our typical early BPH patient example? Well your clock has swept around and you’re now 63, your minor BPH symptoms are more severe. You can’t get through a night without getting up three or four times to urinate. Everytime you wake up you leap out of bed and rush to the bathroom.
During the day you’ve had to hold up a board meeting while you went to the toilet. You can’t take a car drive of more than an hour without stopping. On your business flights you always get an aisle seat so you can hurry to the cramped convenience two or three times during a flight.
Besides that, sometimes it hurts like outrageous sin.
So, you go back to see your urologist. For the past eight years he’s been “monitoring” your BPH. At every examination he assures you that there are no hard lumps or irregular growth of the two side prostate lobes. He says that means you probably don’t have prostatic cancer.
What happens next? You want some relief, you want to feel better and be able to lead a more normal life. It’s a quality of life situation you’re talking about and you want some help, now!
Your urologist agrees and the two of you sit down to talk about the possible ways that your situation can be eased.
You realize that once the prostate starts to grow, nothing we know of now will stop it, except total sterilization. That’s out. What other remedies are there?
THE BALLOON METHOD
One of the new treatments now getting wider acceptance is the use of a balloon. Urologists have borrowed this technique from the heart surgeons. The physician inserts a small tube about the size of spaghetti into the urethra. On the far end of the tube is an un-inflated balloon.
When the balloon is in the proper position in the urethra within the enlarged prostate, the physician inflates the balloon. This inflation is held for different lengths of time. Some urologists use a ten minute period of pressure by the balloon within the urethra to force the urethra to expand back to its original position.
This forces the prostate tissues outward. In some cases the outer casing of the prostate is “cracked” or broken to allow the enlarged prostatic tissue to move in that direction and eliminate the pressure on the urethra.
Just who first developed this technique is not known, but Dr. Flavin Castaneda, a radiologist at St. Francis Medical Center at the University of Illinois in Peoria, is one of the pioneers in the use of this new technique. He says that seventy-five percent of the BPI I patients he has used the balloon treatment on have been symptom free for up to three years after the treatment.
In another part of the country, more than 60 patients have been treated with the balloon dilation method at the University of Minnesota.
For eighty percent of these patients the urination problem was eliminated or significantly eased. This was for patients with enlargement of the side lobes of the prostate. When the narrowing of the urethra was because of enlargement of the middle lobe, the success rate dropped to thirty to forty percent.
Dr. Israel Barken, a urologist in San Diego, California, has been using the balloon treatment.
He says for this procedure the patient is tranquilized and the urethra is numbed with a local anesthetic. Then a thin, flexible tube with a balloon on the tip is inserted into the urethra and guided to the narrowed portion. The balloon is then inflated. He says he uses a time of about 20 minutes. This is an outpatient treatment and no hospitalization is needed. If the patient wants the procedure done in the office or the hospital, he can be accomodated.
Dr. Barken says before this procedure is undertaken, tests are made to assess the extent of the obstruction and to determine its precise location. At this point other tests are done to be sure there is no cancer present or any prostatic infection.
A catheter is left in the bladder until the following morning and then removed.
Dr. Lester A. Klein, an urologist at the Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, California says that at first the balloon treatment was effective on only about thirty percent of the cases. But now with doctors screening out the patients with poor chances for success with the balloon dilation, Dr. Klein says there is a success rate of eighty-six percent.
Dr. Klein is the designer of one of the balloon devices used in the operation and does the procedure himself at Scripps.
Dr. Barken has developed a similar technique using the same principles as Dr. Klein, but without the use of the sophisticated multiple balloons. This helps bring the cost down tremendously.
At this point in mid 1990, urologists who use the balloon technique have praise for it. They say it is effective, and is easy to do with the least amount of stress and worry on the patient. It is non-surgical, and as of yet, there have been no side effects reported. These three factors make it a favorite with patients as well especially when contrasted with surgery.
Another factor is the cost. While few hard figures are obtainable, one Boston urologist said the average total cost for a balloon dilation in the hospital is about $3,600. For the same TURP operation the cost is about $12,000. TURP surgery is one of the operations that remove part or all of the growth in the prostate.
A medical writer in the Wall Street Journal estimated that more than 2,000 of these balloon treatments have been done. A CBS news report about the same procedure said that over 5,000 of them have been undertaken in the past two years.
Not everyone agrees with the use of the balloon dilation treatment. Dr. John W. Schumacher, M.D. from Minneapolis says that this ignores the 10 percent of those who do get a TURP operation and the pathologist find that they have prostate cancer as well. Dr. Schumacher says that if a hundred thousand balloon treatments are used for BPH, then ten thousand of those men who have Stage A or B Cancer won’t find out about it — perhaps until it’s too late to cure them.
Dr. William J. Somers, M.D., a urologist, agrees. He puts hidden cancer of BPH patients at twenty to twenty-five percent.
He says that the use of the balloon dilation or drugs to reduce BPH symptoms is actually doing those twenty-five percent of the patients with hidden cancer a disservice. Other experts say these hidden cancers are rarely fatal in nature.
He maintains that there is no accurate way of determining who has prostate cancer and who doesn’t. Biopsy and ultrasound can help, but he says unless shavings of the gland are examined in a pathology laboratory, the cancer can metastasize and no one will know about it until it’s too late.
Dr. Walter Desmond, Jr. Ph.D. and research manager at Hybritech in San Diego has a slightly different view of the evaluation of the scrapings from a TURP operation. His firm makes a test called the PSA to evaluate the prostate specific antigen level in the blood. A high level can indicate the strong possibility of a silent cancer in the prostate.
He says that some pathologists fail to examine all of the tissue taken out during a TURP operation. Those who don’t evaluate all of the scrapings are shortchanging the patient.
He says the odds are even greater that a hidden cancer may be missed because a proper TURP cuts out the central part of the prostate tissue. The great majority of small cancers start not at the center of the prostate but near or on the surface of the lobes of the prostate, and these areas are often never touched by the surgeon’s electric knife when he cuts out the new canal for the urine to pass through.
Dr. Desmond seems to be saying that if pathologists are finding small cancers in the ten percent, or as high as 30 percent by some scientific evaluations of the TURP scrapings, then the true figure must be much higher than that taking into consideration the two factors presented here.
His slant seems to be that a chemical test such as PSA offers a much better method to detect early prostate cancer than any other method.
Jul
7
HOW TO COPE WITH EARLY BPH. LIVING WITH BPH. Early Stages of an Enlarged Prostate.
July 7, 2009 | Leave a Comment
HOW TO COPE
WITH EARLY BPH
Living with the early stages of an enlarged prostate isn’t all that hard:
This is true. Remember, you had BPH for eight to ten years before it caused you any problems at all. You might have had some mild symptoms for another two or three years before you realized it and found out what was causing them. Now you know.
Now is no time to panic. So these problems caused by BPH area small inconvenience, they are something you can learn to live with. The alternative is not a happy thought.
Let’s go back to our typical case history. This gentleman is the one who is sixty years old and has the three most minor of BPH symptoms: a brief hesitancy when urinating, a slower, less forceful stream, and he usually gets up once a night to urinate.
The secret here is that you know what the cause is of these minor problems, which means you can learn to manage them. You have managed a lot of things in your life, right? First the other kids in your family, then a wife, then your own kids, then that business and all the people you had under you. Compared to that, managing early BPH is a breeze.
First the worry. The experts say again and again that BPH is not cancer, has no connection with prostate cancer, does not lead to cancer and is an entirely separate ailment. So get that out of your mind.
You don’t have prostate cancer, it’s only BPH.
Urologists fight this misconception all the time and gradually they’re winning. They point out that cancer of the prostate is almost always on the outside of the prostate lobes. The enlarged prostate grows inward and outward. There is absolutely no casual relationship between the two.
Now, one more concern with prostate cancer. When surgery is needed for BPH, usually at a much later time than in a man’s fifties or early sixties, there is a finding that about ten percent of the BPH prostates will be found to have a cancer.
Remember, cancer can strike any part of the body at any time in life. It has no connection to BPH. When these cancers are found they are not in the usual places where they could be easily diagnosed during your regular BPH exams. So in reality the BPH surgery is a stroke of luck since most of these cancers are just beginning and are caught quickly so they can be eradicated more easily.
So, from here on we don’t worry about BPH causing or being tied in with prostate cancer in any way. Clear?
LIVING WITH BPH
Urologists point out that the minor symptoms of BPH, often the initial ones, may be the only troubles a man suffers with BPH for as much as ten to fifteen years. That means you shouldn’t even be thinking about or concerned with any worry about prostate surgery or other treatment now. Dump it right out of your computer memory hard disc. Why worry about something that isn’t going to happen for ten to fifteen years? You’ll have plenty of time to fret and stew about it and discuss it with your urologist when the time comes. By then some even better treatments undoubtedly will be developed.
Concentrate on today, and how to make your life pleasant and interesting and fulfilling, right now! in spite of BPH.
We know that there is no “cure” for BPH. You can’t take a pill and like a headache your BPH will just go away. It isn’t that kind of a problem. Even with our miracle modern medical cures, there is nothing even on the drawing boards that will magically cure BPH. So we practice positive thinking and forget about that and move on to areas of behavior that we can and should do something about.
Plain old fashioned horse-sense. With the decline of the horse as the basic transportation unit of Americans, not much is heard anymore about horse-sense. Too bad. Horse sense has shaken down to “common sense”, which is almost as good.
For example, it makes no sense to drink two gallons of water a day when you know you’re going to have to urinate most of that water the same day. Don’t overload your urinary system. The less you drink the less you’ll have to urinate.
Don’t carry this to extremes. The body is at least 1,259 percent water. You need water, fluids, to survive. But there is a happy medium. Some doctors say a man should drink eight, eight ounce glasses of water a day. That’s half a gallon. Actually what they mean is that the body should intake that much fluid a day: coffee, water, milk, soup, colas, juice, any fluid should count.
Many other doctors say this is much more fluid than the average man needs. Your body will tell you when it wants a drink. As a common sense living-with-BPH, start cutting down on your fluids a little at a time. You’ll be urinating less, but still enough. Talk to your urologist or doctor about this and find out what the minimum daily need is for intake fluids for a man of your size and activity. It may be much less than you suspect.
If you do manual labor in the hot sun all day, you’ll need more water than if you’re in an air-conditioned office where you work on a computer. Your doctor will be able to help you here.
TIME YOUR FLUID INTAKE
If nocturia bothers you, and you’re getting up three times a night to urinate, try limiting your fluid intake in the evening. One doctor suggested not to drink any fluids for four hours before retiring. That way your body will have processed your fluids, and passed them well before your sleeping time.
Using a modified system such as this (some men have one small drink at dinner and nothing after that) many BPH patients can cut to once their nocturnal urination. Now that is a real blessing if you can go from three risings to only one a night. This is a prime example of how you can manage your own life to reduce the interference of BPH with your normal activities.
Jul
7
EXAMINATIONS TO CONFIRM BPH
The first exam will be the digital one. Since the prostate is right next to the rectum, it can be palpitated. In this slightly uncomfortable digital exam, the doctor is checking to see if your prostate feels enlarged. He is also finding out if there are any hard spots or lumps or nodes on the two lobes he can touch.
The healthy prostate is smooth, elastic and about the size of a walnut. If there is BPH, the prostate will still feel about the same way but it will be obviously enlarged.
Most urologists say that a digital examination can’t confirm 100 per cent the presence of BPH. They point out, however that with such an exam showing the prostate is soft and rubbery, that there is an enlargement outward of two of the prostate lobes, and that the patient reports three symptoms of BPH, there is sufficient evidence to diagnose BPH.
In the fast paced routines in many HMO’s these days, a patient with these workups may very well be told he has BPH, be shown a video tape concerning the problem, and be told what to do to make living with the condition easier.
He’ll be told that in the early stages of BPH, a patient is not a good candidate for surgery or other regular treatment. Rather he will be put on a “maintenance” program where he is checked by a urologist yearly for any progress of the condition.
Many doctors and urologists say this is the proper course of care. They show histories of men in their fifties who have been on maintenance care for ten, even fifteen years before the prostate enlarged to such a point that surgery or one of the new treatments was necessary.
Another test your urolgist may make is a peak flow test. This can be done with an instrument that will record the flow much as the charts below show.
The first chart shows a more or less normal rate of flow with a peak about half way through and stopping quickly. The lower chart shows a much weaker flow and over twice to three times the length of time. This usually means some serious blockage in the urethra and the urologist will want to follow up with other tests.
Some urologists use a stop watch and a timed urination into a glass to approximate the same results.
25 ml/s Flow Rate
Results of UROFLOWMETRY
T100 17 s
TO 17 s
TOmax 7 s
Qmax 24.0 ml/s
Qave 14.1 ml/s Vcomp 247 ml
0 10 20 s
25 ml/s Flow Rate Results of UROFLOWMETRY
I
T100 60 s
TO 51 s
TQmax 8 s
Qmax 10.2 ml/s
Qave 4.1 ml/s Vcomp 211 ml
I T I
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 s
ARE ANY OTHER TESTS AVAILABLE?
Yes, there are several other tests that urologists can use with the prostate. Some of these are used when prostatic cancer is suspected.
However, since some ten percent of all surgery done to relieve BPH results in finding early stages of prostatic cancer development, some men ask for additional tests. They want to make sure that their prostate is not cancerous as well as having BPH.
These tests in effect become Negative Testing, to assure the patient that there is no cancer in the prostate lobes that can’t be felt by the digital exam.
One of these routines is a simple blood test called the prostate specific antigen (PSA) test. If this test shows an elevation of the antigen, it is a positive factor that cancer possiblyy is present in the prostate. A companion test, the PAP test for prostatic acid phosphatase, may show if the cancer has spread outside the prostate to other parts of the body.
A biopsy could be performed on the prostate, but it would be done only if the doctor found hard lumps and suspected spots on the outer lobes when he examines them digitally.
ULTRASOUND TESTING
One of the newer tools of the urologist is the use of ultrasound. This is sometimes called sonography. It simply uses high-frequency sound waves to examine a specific part of the body and make a record of it.
The record can be a sonogram on special film or on paper, or the whole process can be recorded on video tape for critical examination later, and as a record for comparison later of any growth or changes or condition of the examined areas.
The test is quick, simple and painless. A wand instrument called a transducer is passed back and forth over the area being examined. The wand transmits sound waves that are echoed back to it much like a radar does.
The echoes are electronically transmitted to the recording or viewing device.
When examining the bladder and prostate with ultrasound, the bladder needs to be full of urine. Then the test is repeated after the man has urinated to see what urine remains in the bladder.
Ultrasound is becoming more and more popular with urologists and most hospitals have it available. Many urologists now have ultrasound capability as a part of their office equipment for use when needed.
Another use of the ultrasound system is called a transrectal probe. It can be used in conjunction with a surface sonogram.
Many urologists recommend the transrectal. In this test a probe, covered with a rubber balloon which is then filled with water, is inserted into the rectum. This creates an ultrasonic image of the prostate and bladder area that can be recorded and at the same time viewed on a screen.
Some urologists say the transrectal sonogram will show many false leads that are not really cancer. Others say it is a fine method to determine if there is an area that seems to be a cancer and calls for more investigation.
MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
MRI is an expensive testing method that is painless and quick and can produce a three-dimensional cross section of any part of the body. Users say it is even more detailed than the images produced by a CAT scan.
This test is non-invasive and has no radiation. It uses radio waves in a magnetic field to produce the picture. This test is almost always done in a large hospital.
These days, all testing is expensive. If you have the three-symptom case of BPH, and the digital examination has led to a diagnosis by the physician that as far as he can feel there is no sign of cancer, then it is up to you to decide if you wish to have any more tests to prove to yourself that you are cancer free. Some of these tests, such as ultrasound, are not covered by some of the insurance companies.
One patient was adamant about receiving more tests. He had the three symptom BPH, felt fine, but had a friend who was dying of prostatic cancer. It was well worth it to him to have a $200 sonogram taken that showed no noticeable sign of cancer in his prostate. He was still concerned about the 10 percent of BPH surgery that reveals prostatic cancer. His doctor pointed out to him that such surgeries were performed at a much later point in life than he was. The doctor also said that such BPH problems were much farther developed and had been growing for a greater length of time than his had.
He understood the logic of the urologist. He had been living with his BPH for only about five years. He left the office but a week later called for another appointment. When he came in he said he wanted to take the two blood tests that could reveal the presence of cancer in the prostate, the PAP and PSA tests. Both were made and both showed up negative. Another sign that he did not have prostatic cancer.
The patient was now convinced. He told the urologist that he was not showing disrespect for his qualifications or his skills, but he wanted a little more assurance that he didn’t have cancer than the simple digital examination by the doctor.
