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BPH Treatment

BPH Treatment

Watchful Waiting

Also known as watch and wait, this may be the advice your doctor gives to you once it’s been determined that you do not have another disease and that BPH is the diagnosis. If your BPH treatment are mild and tolerable, you and your doctor may decide that no further action is required at this time, and so you’ll just wait to see if anything new develops. Read more about Watchful Waiting.

BPH Treatment with Medications

Medications for BPH treatment include alpha-blockers to relax the muscles in the prostate and the neck of the bladder so that urine flows more easily, 5-alpha reductase inhibitors to slow the growth of the prostate and cause it to shrink by altering the actions of certain male hormones, and the phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitor tadalafil (Cialis), which can be used to treat erectile dysfunction and BPH.

Read more on drugs for BPH

See also

BPH Drugs May Contribute to Sexual Dysfunction

GSK no longer looking to obtain approval for duasteride (Avodart) and prostate cancer treatment

FDA Issues Prostate Cancer Warning on Jalyn, Avodart, Propecia and Proscar

Invasive, Nonsurgical BPH Treatment Options

If medications for BPH do not provide relief, then your doctor may recommend one of the following procedures to keep the urethra open:

Read more on Nonsurgical BPH Treatment Options

Surgery for BPH

Advances in medical technology have made surgery for BPH less common, now that clinicians can blast, vaporize, and burn away extra prostate tissue using invasive nonsurgical BPH treatment options. But surgery for BPH is still an option for some men who may have severe symptoms that do not respond to other approaches or who have complications that make surgery a wiser choice. Surgical procedures available to deal with BPH include:

TUIP: Transurethral incision of the prostate

TURP: Transurethral resection of the prostate

TVP: transurethral vaporization of the prostate

Prostatectomy

Incontinence after Treatment for BPH

Read more on surgery for BPH

Natural and Alternative BPH Treatment

Non-conventional and naturopathic BPH treatment combine a number of approaches including nutrition and supplements, exercise, lifestyle changes, hormone management and stress reduction. The purpose of this approach is to give the body and immune system the tools it needs to manage inflammation and control the hormonal actions that can cause excessive prostate growth.

Other alternate treatments for BPH include Botox injections into the prostate and well as the use of drugs for erectile dysfunction to treat BPH such as tadalafil (Cialis)

Read more on Natural and Alternative BPH Treatment

See also

Can Lifestyle Modifications Treat BPH and Urinary Tract Infections?

Exercise, BPH and Urinary Tract Infections

Supplements for BPH Treatment

Nutritional and herbal supplements have been shown to help relieve some of the symptoms of BPH. Many of the supplements that are beneficial for BPH treatment are also beneficial to prostate health in general and include Vitamin D3, Zinc, Saw Palmetto, Beta sitosterol, Pygeum africanum, Stinging Nettle Root, Rye pollen (cernilton), Quercetin, Indole-3-carbinol (I3C), Vitamin E (gamma) and Green tea extract.

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See also

Top Supplements for BPH Treatment

Vitamin A, Carotenoids Reduce Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms

Determining Your Treatment Options

The severity of symptoms and BPH treatment are initially determined by the results of the International Prostate Symptoms Test as well as other tests to detect and diagnose BPH. The nature and extent of the symptoms and severity of the diagnosis will determine the appropriate treatment option(s).

Preventing BPH | Side Effects of Treaments for BPH

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Created: August 29, 2010
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Site last updated 23 February, 2012

  
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