Treatment Overview
cannot be cured, so treatment focuses on reducing your
symptoms. Treatment is based on how severe your symptoms are, how much they
bother you, and whether you have
complications.
Deciding how to treat BPH
is greatly influenced by how bothersome your symptoms are. The
American Urological Association (AUA) symptom index
is
an interactive questionnaire that can help you tell how bad your symptoms are
and measure how well your treatment is working. This questionnaire ranks the
severity of your symptoms on a numerical scale. The higher the number, the more
you are bothered by your symptoms and the more aggressive you may want to be in
your treatment.
Initial treatment
The American Urological Association (AUA) makes the following treatment
recommendations for
based on how bad your symptoms are.2
- Symptoms that are mild or that do not bother
you (AUA score of 0 to 7) may be best treated by watchful waiting. This means
you may make small changes to your lifestyle to control your symptoms, but you
do not take medicines or have surgery. You have regular checkups to be sure
your symptoms are not getting worse.
- The treatment of moderate to
severe symptoms (AUA score of 8 or more) depends on how much you are bothered
by them. If the symptoms are not greatly affecting your quality of life, you
may choose watchful waiting or treatment with medicine. If the symptoms are
bothersome or you want more aggressive treatment, you may be offered surgery or
less invasive therapies, such as transurethral microwave therapy () or transurethral needle ablation ().
- Severe symptoms, such as ongoing
inability to urinate, bladder stones, kidney damage, or ongoing blood in your
urine, should be treated with surgery.
There are some things you can do that may help reduce how
much BPH affects your quality of life.
- Do not try to rush your urination. Try to
relax while using the bathroom.
- Spread
throughout the day. Limit fluid intake in the evening if
you often wake up at night to urinate.
- If possible, avoid
that make your symptoms worse.
- Consider trying an
herbal therapy for BPH, such as saw palmetto or
beta-sitosterol. Talk with your doctor before starting any herbal
therapy.
Enlarged Prostate: Should I Take Medicine?
Ongoing treatment
If
your symptoms of
remain mild and not
bothersome, watchful waiting may be your best treatment. With this treatment,
you may make small changes to your lifestyle to control your symptoms, but you
do not take medicines or have surgery. You have regular checkups to be
sure your symptoms are not getting worse.