|
Enlarged Prostate Diagnosis
Diagnosis
of enlarged prostate is based upon medical history in conjunction
with medical testing. Symptoms alone are not a reliable diagnosis
because there are other conditions that mimic the symptoms of
enlarged prostate (urerthral stricture, bladder cancer, prostatitis,
neurogenic bladder, diabetes mellitus).
A
symptom score is widely used to determine whether a physical
examination is required. The American Urological Association Symptom
index is the most commonly used symptom index. Symptoms are
classified according to the total score as mild (1-7), moderate
(8-19) or severe (20-35). Generally, no treatment is needed if
symptoms are mild. Moderate symptoms usually require some form of
treatment and severe symptoms most often lead to surgical treatment.
A
physical exam will involve the examination of the abdomen for a full
bladder and the prostate gland for an assessment of it’s size,
shape and consistency. This is achieved by way of a digital rectum
examination, in which the doctor inserts a gloved finger into the
rectum. The prostate, which is situated immediately adjacent to the
anterior wall, is easily accessible in this manner. The doctor will
be checking to see if the enlargement of the prostate is smooth and
rubbery (consistent with BPH) or hard and nodular (consistent with
prostate cancer).
Further
tests that will be conducted to confirm BPH are a urine analysis and
a urine flow rate test. Simple urine analysis can be performed in the
office with dipstix. If this indicates possible infection a urine
culture should be obtained. If the urine contains blood this should
be further investigated to rule out other causes.
A
urine flow rate is performed by asking the patient to pass urine into
a machine, which measures urine flow rate. Most machines measure the
volume of urine, the maximum flow rate and the time taken to empty
the bladder. For a flow rate test to be of value the patient needs to
pass at least 125-150 ml of urine at one time.
The
most useful parameter is the maximum flow rate or Q-max, measured in
millilitres per second. Although flow is only an indirect measure of
obstruction, most patients with a flow rate less than 10 ml/second
will prove to have bladder outflow obstruction, whereas most patients
with a flow rate of more than 15 ml/second will not have evidence of
obstruction.
An
assessment of renal function will also be taken as part of the
diagnosis process. This will be achieved via a blood sample which
measures the level of serum creatinine.
|