Enlarged Prostate Symptoms
Large
Prostate
The medical term for an abnormally
large prostate is Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia
or for short BPH.
To help
determine the severity of an abnormally large
prostate or BPH, a test was developed that can be self
administered and scored. This test, called the
International Prostate Symptoms Score, is a series of questions
about your symptoms in which you grade their
severity.
Those who
experience BPH typically have a progressive increase in the
severity of the symptoms over a period of time. The most
common abnormally large prostate symptoms include the
frequent need to urinate during the night, a decrease in the
force of the urine stream and the feeling that you
have not completely emptied your bladder immediately
after urinating.
If
the abnormal large prostate constriction of the urethra is
severe and left untreated, more serious complications can
develop including damage to the kidneys and bladder and
infection.
Generally,
treatment for an abnormal large prostate may not be
required if the symptoms are mild and one can live with
them. For more severe symptoms, treatment should be
undertaken which may include surgery.
Treatment,
which usually means surgery, is required for the following more
serious symptoms or damage caused by an abnormal large
prostate:
Bladder stones
Blood in the
urine
Inability to
urinate
Kidney damage
Incontinence
|