Sometimes the simpler way can prove more effective than the more complex ones. With AUR, there is nothing simpler and proven safer method of therapy.
WE MENTIONED last month a safe technique in treating acute urinary retention (AUR), which was investigated in the Hennenfent study in 2006. Compared to the 27.1 percent need for surgery within six months after drug therapy using alfuzosin and the need to perform surgery in a total of close to nine percent of patients, this new method allowed patients to avoid surgery for another 2.5 years.
This new procedure is called manual prostatic massage, a technique found in research literature way back in the early 20th century, particularly 1906. It is non-traumatic as it is scalpel-free.
The study published in Medscape General Medicine on Oct. 25, 2006 used an experimental dose of daily prostate massage for four days in the first week; then three times per week thereafter. The prostate is a male gland that produces semen, and can be manually felt a few centimeters from the anal opening.
Bradley Hennenent led the study, in cooperation with physicians Alfred Lazarte and Antonio Feliciano Jr. of the Manila Genitourinary Clinic, Cebu and Manila branches, respectively. They believed that this approach worked because the massage drained the prostate of pus; thus, it improved the chance of going to the bathroom after an AUR episode. And apparently the procedure worked, as far as this study can show.
The good thing about this procedure is that doctors can... [READ MORE]
This article appears in SunStar Cebu newspaper on 19 September 2012.
hi! where in Cebu is the Manila Genitourinary Clinic located? thanks. :)
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