A new minimally invasive treatment for benign prostate hyperplasia (BPH)

With increasing age, men develop urinary symptoms that become severe enough to consider seeking treatment. Benign Prostate Hypertrophy/Hyperplasia (BPH) is a non-cancerous enlargement of the prostate gland which affects more than 50% of men over the age of 60.

Minimally invasive prostate surgery known as Transurethral Resection of the Prostate (TURP) has almost completely replaced open surgery and thanks to laser technology, there is now a better option. This new procedure, called GreenLight, is increasingly recognised worldwide as the method of choice. It has the same outcomes as TURP but with lower rates of adverse events. There is very little blood loss meaning a quicker recovery and quicker return home for men receiving this laser treatment which vaporises excess prostate tissue.

An emerging treatment known as Prostate Artery Embolisation will be launched in the UK in April 2012 and involves inserting a catheter into the prostatic arteries and sending in minute embolic particles to kill the blood-rich and overgrown prostatic tissues. For further information on becoming part of the monitored clinical introductions into this new treatment for BPH please click here, or click here to contact Interventionalist Radiologist, Dr Nigel Hacking.

A blood vessel that carries blood away from the heart. Apart from the pulmonary artery and umbilical artery, all arteries carry oxygenated blood. Full medical glossary
Not dangerous, usually applied to a tumour that is not malignant. Full medical glossary
A fluid that transports oxygen and other substances through the body, made up of blood cells suspended in a liquid. Full medical glossary
blood pressure Full medical glossary
An abbreviation for benign prostatic hyperplasia, which is enlargement of the prostate that may cause difficulty in passing urine. Full medical glossary
Abnormal, uncontrolled cell division resulting in a malignant tumour that may invade surrounding tissues or spread to distant parts of the body. Full medical glossary
Malignant, a tumour that may invade surrounding tissues or spread to distant parts of the body. Full medical glossary
A tube used either to drain fluid from the body or to introduce fluid into the body. Full medical glossary
An organ with the ability to make and secrete certain fluids. Full medical glossary
An increase in the size of the tissue of an organ resulting from an increase in the size of its individual cells. Full medical glossary
A gland that surrounds the urethra near the bladder. It produces a fluid that forms part of the semen. Full medical glossary
A group of cells with a similar structure and a specialised function. Full medical glossary
transurethral resection of prostate Full medical glossary
An abbreviation for transurethral resection of the prostate, a procedure to shave away some of an enlarged prostate. This eases the pressure from the prostate on the urethra, the tube that carries urine from the bladder. Full medical glossary
The tube that carries urine from the bladder, and in men also carries semen during ejaculation. Full medical glossary
Relating to the urethra, the tube that connects the bladder to the genitals. Full medical glossary