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Endoscopic Prostate Surgeries

A transurethral resection (TURP) of the prostate, is an operation to remove some or most of an enlarged prostate gland so that urine can flow more freely. Prostate surgery is usually performed under general anaesthesia, which means that you will be asleep during the procedure.

What is the best surgery for enlarged prostate?

TURP is generally considered an option for men who have moderate to severe urinary problems that haven't responded to medication. While TURP has been considered the most effective treatment for an enlarged prostate, a number of other, minimally invasive procedures are becoming more effective.

What is the latest prostate surgery technique?

The HoLEP procedure is a unique, laser-based, endoscopic surgery for voiding dysfunction. This non-cancerous condition of an enlarged prostate prevents urine from emptying effectively, which the procedure addresses by passing a laser into the urethra and carving out tissue.

What are the two types of prostate surgery?

  • Retropubic prostatectomy: A surgeon removes the prostate through an incision in the wall of the abdomen.
  • Perineal prostatectomy: A surgeon removes the prostate through an incision in the region between the testicles and anus.

How long does laparoscopic prostate surgery take?

How long does this surgery take? Although this surgery takes approximately 3 hours to perform, patients generally feel much better and have significantly fewer pain requirements in the early operative period.

Can you have an erection without a prostate?

Erectile dysfunction following radical prostatectomy for clinically localized prostate cancer is a known potential complication of the surgery. With the advent of the nerve-sparing radical prostatectomy technique, many men can expect to recover erectile function in the current era.

Is it better to have prostate removed or radiation?

Research has shown that radiation and surgery are equally effective at treating the disease, however, in recent years, radiation treatment has become the preferred treatment option as it causes fewer side effects.

What is the life expectancy after prostate removal?

10-year relative survival rate of 98 percent: Ten years after diagnosis, the average prostate cancer patient is just 2 percent less likely to survive than a man without prostate cancer.

Which is the most common type of prostate surgery?

There are several methods of radical prostatectomy: Radical prostatectomy with retropubic (suprapubic) approach. This is the most common surgical approach used by urologists.

What happens to a man after his prostate is removed?

The major possible side effects of radical prostatectomy are urinary incontinence (being unable to control urine) and erectile dysfunction (impotence; problems getting or keeping erections). These side effects can also occur with other forms of prostate cancer treatment.

Does prostate removal affect personality?

Radical prostatectomy commonly results in urinary, sexual, and bowel dysfunction that bothers men and may lead to depressive symptomatology (hereafter depression) that occurs at a rate 4 times greater for men with prostate cancer than healthy counterparts.

What is the success rate of prostate surgery?

Outcomes that matter

Years post-surgery Free of local recurrence* Free of systemic recurrence†
5-year survival 95.4% 97.0%
10-year survival 93.7% 94.5%
15-year survival 91.3% 93.4%
20-year survival 89.3% 89.8%