Prostatitis Forum & Social Network
Acute and chronic prostatitis discussion. Arnon Krongrad, MD, moderator.
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Hi Antonio,
This afternoon my secretary, Hope, came into my office with a funny look on her face. In her hand was the pathology report from the most recent patient who had LRP for five years of prostatitis. Like the two before, it showed Gleason 6 cancer. That is three for three in the clinical trial, for men aged 40 to 50. Otherwise, there appears nothing interesting in the pathology.
Three for three in the trial also have reported the next day that their prostatitis symptoms were gone. This happened with Ike, who posted his story on Free at Last, and the man yesterday too and the one before. Yes, in the frist days they have the typical post-LRP supra-pubic discomfort but all three have said, like Radford did, that the symptoms they had before surgery are no longer there.
PS: yet another surgeon has now approached me to report relief of prostatitis symptoms with radical prostatectomy. I am now aware of five such surgeons, including myself.
Hi Antonio,
This afternoon my secretary, Hope, came into my office with a funny look on her face. In her hand was the pathology report from the most recent patient who had LRP for five years of prostatitis. Like the two before, it showed Gleason 6 cancer. That is three for three in the clinical trial, for men aged 40 to 50. Otherwise, there appears nothing interesting in the pathology.
Three for three in the trial also have reported the next day that their prostatitis symptoms were gone. This happened with Ike, who posted his story on Free at Last, and the man yesterday too and the one before. Yes, in the frist days they have the typical post-LRP supra-pubic discomfort but all three have said, like Radford did, that the symptoms they had before surgery are no longer there.
PS: yet another surgeon has now approached me to report relief of prostatitis symptoms with radical prostatectomy. I am now aware of five such surgeons, including myself.
Hellow Arnon,
Thank you for the reply. Your work may disprove the pelvic muscle theory. The mere fact that when the prostate gland is removed the pain dissapears.
Please continue to update us with your work.I suspect that we will learn from your study.
Regards
AEF
We really do not know what causes the symptoms we call prostatitis. If indeed there is an association of prostate and muscle etiologies, which has not been tested, we still would have no idea if such an association is causal and which caused which. We have to be very careful not to overinterpret what is no more than a handful of cases. All we really can say now is that a handful of surgeons, Dr Eden and me included, have reported results that are really well captured by Ike's story: relief of years of symptoms with prostatectomy.
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