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Sunday, August 19, 2018

Prostate Cancer Symptoms - What Many People Don't Know

You are not alone in wanting to know the symptoms of prostate type of cancer. While many people think they really know the symptoms, they are wrong. So, it's important to take the time to find out what the real symptoms are. This article throws more light on that so that you can be better informed. But of course, ensure that you read through carefully.
One of the biggest problems with prostate cancer is that the sarcoma has no early symptoms whatsoever - certainly none that the medical community is aware of. The consequence of this is that you can be in the early stages of the condition - a time when most treatments will work well enough against the carcinoma to cure it - and you'd never even know it. The only solution that can be proffered for this problem is that you should get yourself to the hospital no less than once a year after a certain age. The American Cancer Society believes that age 50 is safe enough because the cancer usually prefers older men.
Another problem with prostate cancer is that many of its symptoms are extremely similar to those of other prostate disorders resulting in a necessarily complex diagnostic process on certain occasions. To begin with, as prostate-cancer tumors begin to grow larger, they often cause the prostate gland to swell, a condition called prostate enlargement. This condition however can also be caused by BPH, benign prostatic hyperplasia, which often causes a blockage of the urethra. Another symptom of prostate cancer, pain in urination, can be caused by sickle cell anemia and a Chlamydia infection.
Other prostate disorders like trichomoniasis, prostatitis, and prostate gland hypertrophy, all create their own different set of symptoms, all similar to those of prostate cancer in a way, but none with the exact combination of frequent urination, increased urination at night, difficulty starting and maintaining a steady stream of urine, blood in the urine, painful urination, not to mention problems with sexual function and performance, such as difficulty achieving erection or painful ejaculation.
When you have all of these, you likely have prostate type of cancer, but please let the doctor still carry out their diagnostic tests, will you? Don't kill yourself in the beginning with panic because it might end up not being what you think it is. So, always see your doctor whenever you experience any of such symptoms. They are the experts and should be the ones to examine you before telling you whether it is or not.