by: Fritz Frei
1. Testosterone and its active
metabolite.
Dihydro-testosterone
are essential for prostate cancer to develop, but does not actually cause
prostate cancer. Men who are castrated at a young age do not develop prostate cancer.
2. Prevalence of prostate cancer
One in ten men
will develop clinically significant prostate cancer in their lifetime. It is
the most commonly diagnosed cancer in American males with 250 000 new cases
reported annually. Prostate cancer is second only to lung cancer as a cause of
cancer death in both the USA and the UK. Prostate cancer is rare among
Orientals. It is more common in black than white Americans. The disease appears
to present at a younger age and behave more aggressively in American blacks.
Prostate cancer is common in South Africa and probably underreported as a cause
of death. The exact incidence in South Africa is not known as no large-scale
epidemiological studies have been performed. It is uncertain whether prostate
cancer is more common in South African blacks as compared to whites. In very
old men prostate cancer is not always clinically significant. Autopsy data
indicate a 70% incidence of prostate cancer in 80 year old men. The majority of
these men died with rather than from prostate cancer.
3. Causes of prostate cancer
There is no single
cause of prostate cancer. The cancer originates in the epithelial cells of the
glandular elements of the prostate. As with most cancers defects in the DNA of
the cell are central to the development of prostate cancer. Multiple DNA
defects are required for cancer to develop. This multi-step process takes place
over time. Some defects can be inherited, while others are acquired during the
patient's lifetime. Prostate cancer is exceedingly rare before the age of 40,
but 1 in 8 men between the ages of 60 and 80 years suffer from the disease. 9%
of all prostate cancers are caused by a genetic susceptibility, probably
inherited via chromosome 1. These genetically related cancers tend to present
at a relatively younger age.
4. What is prostatitis?
Prostatitis means
“inflammation of the prostate”, and is one of the most common reasons men
visiting the doctor in the western world. It is most common in men over the age
of 30, and particularly in men over the age of 60. While prostatitis is
treatable, diagnosis can be lengthy and not all treatments are successful. This
is partly because the various causes of prostatitis are not fully understood.
There are three main types of prostatitis:
·
Acute prostatitis, which develops suddenly and
may not be permanent.
·
Non-bacterial prostatitis, which may develop
suddenly or follow a slower or variable course. It is now more commonly called
chronic male pelvic pain syndrome because it cannot be proved to be
“non-bacterial”, though a bacterial cause cannot be identified.
·
Chronic (bacterial) prostatitis, which develops
gradually and may only have subtle symptoms, though it often continues for a
prolonged period.
·
asymptomatic inflammatory prostatitis - which
has no symptoms at all but results in an inflamed prostate, is sometimes
mentioned. It has been discovered when biopsies are conducted on the prostate
to rule out cancer, and no cancer is found. This is a histological and not a
clinical diagnosis. Prostatitis is often reported on the histological analysis
of TURP specimens when the prostate resection was performed for symptoms of
BPH. If the patient is asymptomatic this histological finding does not warrant
any treatment.
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