It is the genetic destiny of men, as they get older, to start to experience problems with their prostate. Half of men who have prostate problems, or benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), will experience bothersome symptoms.
Active surveillance, oral medication, lasers or an electric loop that burn the prostate tissue from the inside out have been historic treatments for BPH. However, steam treatment has shown great promise and is changing the way BPH is treated.
Steam treatment is a convective water therapy that shrinks the prostate. The procedure can be performed in the doctor's office and has a low risk for complications and side effects.
Dr. Tobias Kohler, a urologist at Mayo Clinic, discusses steam treatment for benign prostatic hyperplasia.
Helpful Links
More helpful discussion may be found at the Men’s Health Group
Learn more about benign prostatic hyperplasia.
Thanks for all the replies. It's been 9 weeks since I had the Rezum procedure. The bleeding and pain stopped after 6 weeks. I've had 3 urinary tract infections that have been resolved with antibiotics. I now have a good flow when I urinate with no problem during the day or night. BUT, I am now incontinent and have lost all my libido and ability to get an erection at all. I was never incontinent in my life. So, the trade-off is I couldn't pee at night (even with large doses of Flowmax or Alfuzosin) while now I pee on myself all the time (day and night) and have 100% ED. I wouldn't do this procedure in hindsight or recommend it to ANYONE.
I am still waiting to hear from a patient that has actually had the REZUM therapy. Are there any on this forum?
Thank you for the insight. Can you share your story from the beginning? I am considering REZUM but finding it difficult to get accurate real information. I am 81 and on Tamsulosin for about 5 years. Information keeps changing. I fear exactly the things you are experiencing. Thanks again for sharing.
Dr. Kohler,
I had been given numerous different measurements when I ask "what is the size of my prostate". I have been told 50 grams, then 57 CC, then 71CC and last time 81CC.
Can you share what the proper measurement is" Is it grams, CC or ML? I am very confused.
Thank you for sharing. I am 81 years old and just cancelled my REZUM appointment. I am reconsidering whether to have any procedure and focus more on managing my symptoms. I have been told that as we age the growth of prostate slows in many men. I am on Tamsulosin and it does still work. I have added Vitamin D, Turmeric and beta sitosterol. I will focus more on understanding size and growth. Hopefully it will slow before symptoms grow. Thank you again very much for sharing. I hope things improve quickly for you.
Thank you for sharing. I hope the incontinence goes away with time and exercises.
Interesting. My current Urologist tells me that REZUM works for large median lobe. Frankly I am confused and am beginning to have little confidence in what I am reading and hearing from the some of the medical professionals. A lot of the info is put out by the company that sells the machine. I am looking in to PAE as an alternative and remaining on current regimen of Tamsulosin.
I just yesterday cancelled my appointment for REZUM due to other medical issue that cropped up. Thanks for insights on HOLEP. I am currently on Tamsulosin and it does work so perhaps I should take a step back.
Dr. Kohler,
You described Holep procedure and used example of an orange and rind.
Question I have is:
Does using the laser remove all or portions of the uretha and what are the implications of this short and long term? I am considering laser.
Thank you
Thanks for the question - the anatomy of the prostatic urethra is a bit confusing. There are 4 distinct parts of the urethra - the first 2 are distinct tubes, the 3rd portion traverses the sphincter muscle and finally there is the prostatic urethra. The prostatic urethra is not really a tube per se here, rather it is the potential space that occupies the donut hole of the prostate - thus it can be a circular, slit like or any shaped opening. When surgeons remove prostate tissue they are not disrupting a confined tube, rather they are simply expanding that opening typically into a big circle. In case of a holep that circle is very large as it is takes the prostate to the maximum outer limit (the prostate capsule = rind of orange). Because so much more tissue is removed with Holep it is a more durable case as regrowing tissue to cause more blockage takes longer. On the downside the chance of problems with ejaculation is definitely higher. Some think risk of ED is also higher compared to other less invasive/max tissue removing approaches.