Pain relief
Pain doesn't affect all men with prostate cancer but there are various ways in which pain may be controlled if it occurs. If cancer has...
During surgery a small tube or catheter is put into the bladder through the penis so that urine can be drained into a collecting bag. This is usually done while the patient is anesthetised, so nothing is felt at that stage. To prevent blood clots blocking the catheter, bladder irrigation may also be used.
After a transurethral resection the catheter is usually removed before the patient goes home from hospital. After a radical prostatectomy the catheter is usually left in place for one to two weeks, to allow the bladder and urethra to heal. Men who have a radical prostatectomy usually manage their catheters at home for a while and then return to hospital to have them removed.
Also see ‘Urinary incontinence‘.
Pain doesn't affect all men with prostate cancer but there are various ways in which pain may be controlled if it occurs. If cancer has...
Short-term urinary incontinence is very common after radical prostatectomy. However, for most men, this usually clears up within three to six months of the operation....