Ablation, has anyone heard of this type of treatment?
Has anyone heard Ablation as a type of treatment to prostate cancer? Or is this another word for some other type of treatment? Thank you.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
Perhaps it's not as obvious as I thought, but radiation of any sort is certainly to be included in the category of ablation. The advantage of saying "ablation" is that it includes all forms of killing cancer cells or nodules of cancer cells in situ--right where they are, through targeted destruction of all cells in a particular area (and as some have pointed out more or less cells in surrounding areas.
The challenge, of course, is that it won't kill cells that aren't targeted, and it will kill cells that aren't cancerous.
Some of the treatment strategies do not require physical penetration of the body cavity. They suffer from the challenge of getting destructive power to just the right place from a distance.
Other treatment strategies do require getting to the target (like brachytherapy, which embeds tiny pellets of radioactive material) while other strategies require getting close (like HIFU-high intensity focused ultrasound, which typically works from within the urethra.)
Most of the time, ablation is offered as an option to men with cancer that is identified through biopsy as 7=3+4 or less, i.e. intermediate favorable or lower grade cancers. When the cancer is apparently limited to one or two identifiable (and reachable) nodules in the prostate, ablation may slow the progress of the cancer* without requiring an operation removing the prostate and without killing too much else that will be missed. Since the prognosis without any treatment is typically 15-20 years, the thought is that ablation will lead to an even better prognosis (although this gets hard to measure since life gets in the way over these longer time periods.)
*Some would say "stop," but this in my mind is speculative. All of us in this forum once had prostate cancer even though it was undetected ;-).
Etymology has little to do with modern meanings, but in case it's helpful:
Latin "ab" = "away (from)"
Latin "latio" = "(the act of) carrying"
So "ablation" comes from "carrying away", just like "translation" comes from "carrying across," e.g. from one language to another.
(It's nice to be able to post about something I've been properly trained in for a change, so I can skip the "layperson" warning. 🙂)
Correct - Not covered by OHIP . The cost is around $ 25, 000 Can.
Ah, you bring me back to Catholic high school where 4 years of Latin was mandatory. I LOVED it! Most didn’t but it is probably the most useful subject I ever studied - use it to this day when I come across a word I never heard before. And it really comes in handy when doing crossword puzzles.
It has very strict and complex rules of syntax - every word in a sentence has to agree in case, number and gender and the verb tenses are unreal!
Most kids today cannot even speak the language of their native country properly, let alone a ‘dead’ ancient one
I learned medieval Latin where they mess up all those beautiful, elegant rules of formal classical Latin writing, but I agree that it's great for guessing and remembering the meanings of complex technical words.
See related discussions:
- Ablation treatment for prostate cancer.
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/ablation-treatment-for-prostate-cancer/
- Any experiences with HIFU localized ablation for prostate cancer?
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/hifu-localized-ablation-for-prostate-cancer-e-g-at-stanford-med/
- Anyone do Tulsa Pro, newer laser ablation procedure?
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/tulsa-pro/
- Tulsa Pro Experience, Mayo Clinic MN – July 2024
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/tulsa-pro-experience-mayo-clinic-mn-july-2024/
@intriagozz, what treatment did you choose?
Here is my Tulsa Pro experience:
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/tulsa-pro-initial-experience/
Our situation is almost identical. I’m scheduled for HIFU in two weeks. Fingers crossed
Best wishes for the the best possible outcome!