Legal Law

Prostate Self Exam – Digital Rectal Exam at Home

At first we should ask ourselves the question, “why is a prostate self-examination necessary?” Most men are reluctant to see doctors. We know that the digital rectal exam (DRE) can deter some men from seeking preventive health checkups. The evidence, which is pretty conclusive at this point, is that whenever a hospital or clinic offers free prostate cancer screenings that include both the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) blood test and the DRE, the rates of involvement of members of surrounding communities are always much lower than if the PSA blood test is offered alone. So many more men will participate if only the public service announcement is offered.

Instead of harassing these men to “man up” and endure a humiliating ordeal, we can offer them an alternative. While some are skeptical about the value of prostate self-examination, the fact is that these skeptics have no choice but to suggest it other than harassing men to get prostate exams from their doctors.

Prostate self-examination will have greater value and effectiveness when men are educated on how to perform these self-exams. Men have to learn how to do prostate exams by watching videos, available on the Internet, in which doctors demonstrate the technique. They also need to see dozens of diagrams of the prostate so they know what to expect when they do their self-exam.

We already encourage all men, but especially those between the ages of 15 and 35, to perform a monthly testicular self-exam. If men can examine their own testicles, then they are likely to be mature enough and capable of examining their prostates once they learn how to do so and gain some experience examining their own prostates.

Men sometimes think that a doctor inserts a finger and then directly touches their prostates. That perception is not correct. The finger (or finger) is inserted through the rectum, but then the finger is placed inside the intestine, which is separate and distinct from the prostate gland. Essentially, the doctor, or the patient in the case of self-examination, presses down on the wall of the intestine in order to feel the posterior surface of the prostate gland under the wall of the intestine. However, the wall of the intestine effectively protects the prostate, so any nodule or suspicious area must be large enough to be palpated through this cushion. Ideally, the examiner would like to be able to touch the surface of the prostate directly, but he has to make a close substitute for palpating it through the wall of the intestine.

things to remember

A normal prostate is the size of a walnut. Prostates can be enlarged to the size of a lemon. Possible causes of an enlarged prostate include benign prostatic hyperplasia or hormonal imbalance (too much estradiol or dihydrotestosterone) or prostatitis. As men age they enter a period we call Andropause; It is analogous to menopause in women. During Andropause, which normally lasts until the end of a man’s life, the body produces too little testosterone, resulting in an imbalance between testosterone and estrogen.

Estrogen levels in men are measured through the level of serum estradiol. Both estradiol and dihydrotestosterone, the powerful form of testosterone, can irritate and cause an enlarged prostate. Elevated estradiol levels have been shown in clinical studies to cause prostate cancer; while dihydrotestosterone is known to accelerate the growth of prostate cancer, it does not appear to cause the cancer itself. A third explanation for why a prostate can become enlarged is if the patient has prostatitis.

The prostate feels similar to the pulp of an orange cut in half. If you feel something hard like the pit of an orange against the softer pulp, it would be a suspicious area for prostate cancer.

Important points to remember

For prostate self-examination, the finger should be inserted into the rectum with the palm of the hand facing down and the nail of the index finger facing up. It will feel much more natural, especially the first time you try this, to insert your finger palm up and dig down. If you were to clean yourself with a bar of soap, you would naturally hold the soap palm up and fingernails down. But you will need to learn to rotate your hand so that your palm is facing down and your fingernail is facing up, so that you can feel the prostate with the pad of your finger and not with your nail. You will feel uncomfortable at least the first five times you try to insert your finger in the correct position.

The prostate is not round in shape like a walnut, but more like the top of a heart-shaped object. Most men will find that they have a left lobe, a median lobe over which the urethra passes and effectively divides the prostate, and a right lobe. With a little practice, you will be able to tell which lobe you are playing and any slight differences between the lobes.

When you perform your prostate self-exam at home, you will need to lean forward so that the prostate bulges out and can be felt more easily. If you stand up straight, your prostate will point down (in the direction of your legs) and will be harder to feel with the digital rectal exam.

Get a more complete prostate exam than you’re likely to get from a family doctor. Go over each available surface of the prostate at least three times, using different circular motions each time. In the privacy of your own home, take at least a full minute and preferably two minutes to examine your prostate. Its goal is to be able to detect any cancerous nodule (hard surface) the size of a grain of rice. You won’t be able to feel a suspicious nodule in that degree of detail with a flick of your finger once over the prostate.

So when you go to the family doctor’s office and the doctor inserts a finger and quickly moves it over the prostate, and the complete check takes three or four seconds, that’s not a detailed check of the prostate. Something that superficially failed to detect a cancer the size of a grain of rice. And that is your goal; their goal is always early detection while the prostate cancer is still small.

WARNINGS

Do not attempt prostate self-exams if you are not willing to take the time to learn how to check your prostate by reviewing clinical practice guidelines available online. Your health is at risk; trust yourself only if you have the brainpower to distinguish between normal and abnormal surfaces in soft tissues such as the prostate. If you think you will not be able to distinguish between normal and abnormal surfaces, you should not attempt this check yourself.

Benefits of prostate self-examination

The patient can check the prostate more regularly than just once a year (early detection leads to earlier diagnosis and treatment). He can check your prostate quarterly or as often as he prefers given the condition of your prostate, but he doesn’t have to limit himself to an annual checkup.

Second, men who learn how to do prostate self-exams can avoid the discomfort and embarrassment that men often associate with digital rectal exams. Third, men can visit the doctor more often without worrying about being asked to have a DRE or prostate check at every visit.

The interested reader should view the instructional video associated with this article. The video is located at http://www.michaelguth.com/?p=1155

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