Although it often affects older men, prostate cancer can strike anyone after the age of forty. It is advised that men over the age of forty get their prostates checked once a year because the chance of acquiring cancer rises with age. The illness will then be identified in time and the treatment for prostate cancer can be conducted effectively. Prostate cancer has no known exact origin, is not communicable, and has nothing to do with a person’s sexual behaviour or any past sexually transmitted diseases that may have affected him.
Symptoms:
Urinary pain and frequent urination. Sometimes sexual difficulties or a change in the sperm’s quality, such as a crimson staining, require you to consult the patient’s doctor. Urine happens frequently at night, is challenging to start, is ejected more slowly and in a weaker jet, and drips occur at the conclusion of urination. The patient typically feels as though he cannot entirely empty his bladder, and that is true! In the bladder, urine starts to build up and stagnate, which can cause superinfection, more complaints, and painful, burning, bloody urination. Fever is frequently present along with the infection, and in extremely bad cases, renal inflammation or kidney failure may result.
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