Post prostatectomy: What do rising PSA levels mean?
New to group! Wish I had checked this out 2 years ago while supporting my husband! Now over e years post prostatectomy, wondering what might make psa go from all 0 to 2.6...
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Phil,
The damage from the radiation cystitis was producing a fistula near the bladder neck. I had a prior surgery in October to try to repair and seal that area with no success. Thus the cystectomy, while I was waiting for my appointment once we determined the repair was unsuccessful, the area that they had tried to repair started leaking again Through another fistula. The bacteria in the urine settles in the lowest part of your abdomen, which then can infect your pelvic/pubic bones. Through an MRI with contrast, they found that this infection was starting to deteriorate the pelvic bone in that area. So when they went to remove my bladder, they had to take out the damaged area of the bone until they saw a good bleeding bone For recovery. They tied in some antibiotic seeds to this area and now I am on a six week regiment of heavy duty infusion but able to do it at home thank God. The abdomen pain from the surgery is going very well. It is just the hip pain infection that is causing me mobility issues that I was not expecting. Al
Boy, the complications we don’t even THINK about! Why is it that the cure is always worse than the problem?
Let’s hope the improvement in the quality of your life exceeds all your suffering a hundredfold.
Hang in there, buddy, we’re all pulling for you!
Phil
What type of issues are you referring to?
What was your first PSA number following SBRT?
My numbers started out very low from undetectable too .10 3 months later .19 continual checks kept slow slowly gaining to .55 is when I think we decided to start looking and found that the cancer had returned to areas around the prostate pocket and which is also the base of the bladder. I went almost 2 years after being undetectable again and now March 2025 the numbers have started to gain slowly again. In between the end of the radiation and today, I had quite a year of issues mainly 2024. It started with bladder, neck, bleeding, and catheters to be able to keep from clotting. Incontinence issues throughout the year.
Attempted JP drains to drain the areas where the bladder was feeding the fistula to no avail. Another surgery in October to try to fix the bladder neck area that was having all the issues. They tried omental flap to see if it could heal the damage.Through this process, I was taking 68 hyperbaric oxygen therapy treatments to see if I could help new blood cell growth in that area that was damaged by all of the radiation. The HBO therapy did not seem to have the results we were hoping for. That is when we made the decision to have the cystectomy which was performed February 28. Very relieved of the painful situations I was having throughout 2024. I still have healing going on but nothing like the issues I was dealing with. To top it off infection from the leaking bladder created bacteria that got into my pelvic bones and was almost disabling. High doses of antibiotics prior to and a six week regimen after surgery into mid April.
You are living the fear we all have: radiation doing more harm than good? Radiation damage is extremely difficult to deal with; normal surgical techniques often fail since whatever the surgeon touches already has a compromised blood supply.
Even the hyperbaric O2 didn’t work….man, you just didn’t catch a break anywhere…
Phil,
No , surely didn’t. If I could’ve only got my surgery scheduled sooner. Waited 3 months to get in. I might have avoided the pelvis issues. Will trudge on and hope the antibiotics do their thing. Al.
What is SRT?
Salvage Radiation Therapy
How can you say everything under 4.0 ng/ml is normal for someone who is post RP?... Everything i have read sugests that anything ABOVE 0.01 (undetectable) is something to pay attention to...
I’m not an expert and have no medical experience, It’s just what I have read and shared the link with my post. I also suggested that the person discuss it with their doctor.