Tips for Getting the Best Results While Having Prostate Cancer Surgery
You've probably had a lot of discussions with friends and family and certainly your doctors about this. It's tough because there are competing goals and values you have to consider when deciding about surgery. Some of the more important ones that many men consider are returning to their sexual health baseline after treatment. This is probably the most variable thing for some men. This is very important for some men, not as important, and men's sexual health baseline in their 50s and 60s vary quite a bit. Most men find retaining control of their urinary function to be very important. As a side note, prostate cancer surgery can also help men who have a blockage or straining to urinate by removing that tissue. A key goal for almost all guys is being cancer-free. Of course, you're having treatment to get rid of this cancer, and you don't want it to come back. And finally, men want to get back to their normal life as soon as possible, work, recreation, family, and so forth. So your surgeon will certainly help you in maximizing these outcomes, but there are some things that you can do in terms of engaging, asking questions, and doing your homework, in terms of getting the best outcomes. But first, why is this so complicated? Why are these things so interrelated? As a brief review, it's because of the anatomy. So this is the prostate gland right here. It's part of the male reproductive system, and its job is to produce the fluid in the ejaculate that helps the sperm to live and initiate a pregnancy. So, for many men, when they've been diagnosed with prostate cancer in their 50s or 60s or 70s, that function is not so important anymore, so it isn't doing a whole lot for you. However, removing it does risk important things that you do care about, so, for example, these yellow structures are the nerves that come down from the brain and end up innervating the penis, so they don't cause the sensation of the penis, but they trigger the arteries in the penis to open up and possibly fill with blood during sex, giving you an erection. So you can see here, these nerves live right on the surface of the prostate gland, and when you take that gland out, you've got to sweep those nerves off very carefully-that's called nerve-sparing--to preserve normal sexual function.