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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I think its awesome that you are 15 years post surgery. Rising levels now may represent a chemical reoccurrence. I would watch it closely. My dr. just advised to retest in 3 months and do nothing now at my .15.
I lift weights a lot. Does this result in higher testosterone levels. My current level is 230. Should i change my exercise program now that my psa has risen to .15 2 1/2 years post RP?
Hello @itterac, Welcome to Connect. From what I've read everything under 4.0 ng/mL is normal. Here's some information I found about your question.
Does Working Out Affect Testosterone Levels?: https://www.webmd.com/men/features/exercise-and-testosterone#1
It sounds like you may be concerned about the rise in your PSA since your radical prostatectomy (RP). Have you asked your doctor about your concern?
I don’t know but you are my hero!
If I were to guess, he had his prostate removed in 1992, his PSA is now in the 90's while his CT scan, bone scan and PET scan came back clear of cancer.
Radical proctocolectomy 1992, PSA slowly increasing in last 15 years, now mid 90's. Cat scan, bone scan and pet scan negative. Has anyone else experienced similar results. I would like to know what is going on.
93 years old, radical in 1992 PSA 90's, CT, Bone and Pet show no detectable metastasis. What could be going on?
Hi @ozment, you'll notice that I moved your messages to this existing discussion called "Post prostatectomy: What do rising PSA levels mean?" (https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/post-prostatectomy/) Click VIEW & REPLY to read through the past comments.
You said that you had a proctocolectomy, the surgical removal of the colon and rectum. Were you also diagnosed with prostate cancer?
Yes. He wants me to do a pet scan just to be sure there is no reoccurrence
Collen guess I did not do spell check properly, radical prostatectomy not proctocolectomy,