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All Enlarged Prostate Alerts
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Dialogue With Dr. A: Will Prostatitis Affect My Quality of Life?
Chronic prostatitis can be a devastating ailment that seriously impairs a man's quality of life. In this excerpt from an in-depth report on chronic prostatitis from the Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin, Dr. Richard Alexander provides insights.
Prostatitis is a condition found in adult men, with no respect to age, race, or nationality. It's estimated that as many as 14% of adult American men will at some point go to their doctor complaining of one or more
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Prostatitis--Nailing Down the Diagnosis
According to one study, men with prostatitis have a quality of life so diminished that it is comparable to that of men who have recently suffered a heart attack. If you experience symptoms of prostatitis, the first step is getting a correct diagnosis. Johns Hopkins provides advice.
Prostatitis is a broad term for an infection or inflammation of the prostate. Over the past decade, urologists have identified four types of prostatitis:
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Do You Have BPH?
Approximately 50% of all men experience symptoms of enlarged prostate, BPH, by age 75. If you're one of them, you'll want to take this easy, self-scoring questionnaire to calculate the severity of your symptoms.
The International Prostate Symptom Score questionnaire, also called the American Urological Association Symptom Index, was developed by the American Urological Association to help men evaluate the severity of their symptoms from benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) -- enlarged prostate. This self-administered BPH
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What Causes Prostatitis?
If you have prostatitis, you're not alone. Prostatitis usually affects men in their early 40s, and it is one of the leading reasons why men visit a urologist. In this Health Alert, Johns Hopkins explains why chronic prostatitis is so difficult to treat.
There are two kinds of prostatitis -- bacterial and nonbacterial. Nearly 95% of patients are thought to develop prostatitis from nonbacterial causes, which have yet to be identified.
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Should You Consider Watchful Waiting?
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is the most common benign (noncancerous) growth process in men. About one in four men experiences BPH-related symptoms by age 55; by age 75 half of men have BPH symptoms. If you are diagnosed with BPH, you and your doctor will decide together if watchful waiting is an option for you.
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