Prostate Restored
Photo: Jacques Philippe Gollnick
Prostatitis can't always be cured, but its symptoms can be managed. Treatment should be followed even if you feel better. Patients with prostatitis aren't at higher risk for getting prostate cancer. There's no reason to stop normal sex unless it bothers you.
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Read More »Your health care provider may start by asking you questions about your pain to find out what’s wrong. A digital rectal exam (DRE) may be done to check the prostate. Your doctor may do a transrectal ultrasound to look at your prostate or do a test called cystoscopy to check your urinary system. You may also be asked to get lab tests to look for bacteria in your urine or prostate fluid. A urine flow study or urodynamics test may be done to look for a block in your urinary system. If your health care provider suspects a problem with your prostate or nearby tissues, he/she may send you to a urologist. A urologist is a doctor who treats problems of the urinary tract and male reproductive systems. Each type of prostatitis calls for a different treatment. Your doctor will want to know exactly what is causing your symptoms. To find the answers, more than one type of test may be used.
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Read More »But those with the highest insulin levels were more than twice as likely to get prostate cancer compared with those with the lowest insulin levels. They didn't see the same pattern with blood sugar. Men with blood sugar levels on the higher end didn't show more prostate cancer risk.
Prostate cancer is the most common type of cancer in men. More than 1 in 10 men will get it at some point in their life. Your chances of getting prostate cancer will depend on many different things: your age, family history, genetics, diet, weight, and more. Another thing that can influence your prostate cancer risk in complicated ways is your insulin level. Your body needs the hormone insulin to control blood sugar (glucose). When you have diabetes or prediabetes, your body stops responding to insulin the way it should. Doctors call this insulin resistance. Your body will respond by making more insulin. Your blood sugar levels also will go up. What’s this have to do with prostate cancer? The connections between insulin, blood sugar, diabetes, and prostate cancer might surprise you. They certainly seem to not make sense at first. Studies have linked higher levels of insulin to a greater risk of prostate cancer. Diabetes comes with an increased risk for many cancer types and plenty of other health problems. But it turns out that people with diabetes are actually less likely to get prostate cancer than those who don’t have it. At the same time, people with diabetes who get prostate cancer more often do worse.
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