PROSTATITIS TREATMENT: SELECTING A UROLOGIST
You should select a urologist who is not only highly competent but also gentle and compassionatethese are not traits that you will find in all surgeons, but such able and supportive professionals are out there.
James Lewis, an author and a survivor of prostate cancer, suggests calling the urology department at a large hospital and asking the secretary whom he or she would want within the department to operate on a relative (secretaries often learn which doctor is considered the best or most trusted in the hospital).
Ask your primary care physician and friends for their recommendations, especially if they are in the medical profession. Surgical nurses are also a good source of advice.
The local medical society can assist you in obtaining names of urologists you can contact and interview. You can also locate urologists by calling the State Medical Directory, the American Board of Certified Specialists, or the American Medical Association Directory.
In interviewing urologists, find out what type of surgery they generally recommend to relieve your problem. Ask about the urologist's proficiency with the nerve-sparing technique, which reduces the possibility of becoming impotent. You should also ask how many such operations the urologist has performed and how many patients have experienced adverse side effects.
An operation for BPH isn't as radical as an operation for prostate cancer, but if your doctor discovers malignant tissue during the surgery or after the tissue is removed and analyzed, then you will require additional surgery or treatment. You want to be sure that your urologist is trained to do whatever is necessary.
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Men's Health Erectile Dysfunction