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Gents, check your PSAs.
A raised PSA from a routine physical brought me to a urologist. 1 week later I had a prostate biopsy (Un-fun. Plus, since I'm at a teaching hospital, I had an audience.) Four days later, on March 22, I got the call: prostate cancer. That's the bad news. Now the relatively good news: it's non-aggressive, and very low on the Gleason score scale. And I'm young (51).
I met the urologist yesterday, along with a resident, a nursing team, and a designated nurse coordinator in a large, state of the art teaching hospital cancer center. I looked at other patients and realized I am really one of the fortunate ones. We spoke about the disease, all of the treatment options, and the risks involved. I will be going the surgery route. I will get a 2nd opinion, but for those who know about such things, the key is to have someone who has done a LOT of these surgeries. My urologist is a professor and urology department chair. He has been doing these for 25 years, and does over 2 of them a week himself, and his total is around 1,300. He was also up front with statistics on all of his patients in terms of risks and side effects of this very complex surgery. I haven't found the "Consumer Reports" on prostate surgeons, but I feel like I'm in good hands.
One catch: I need to shed 25 pounds before he'll do the surgery. As my wife said in the meeting: "DONE!" I have never - ever - had such motivation to lose weight, which will have long-term benefits well beyond getting my prostate removed. At a minimum I'll be able to carry 4 more gallons of fuel when I get back in the air!
So, I have a weight check in 6 weeks, and if I'm showing appropriate progress, we'll schedule surgery for July. I am grounded for now, and may miss AirVenture this year, but I know these things are temporary.
My wife and daughter are taking this journey with me. I've got a friend who has gone though this 2 years ago, who told me that treatment is like fraternity hazing for a pretty large fraternity that you want to be in for a long time. I've reached out to the very kind Dr. Bruce, who told me that this is a bump in the road, not structural damage. And I've reached out to a couple other pilots who have been through this or are going though this. I've never met them, but they have both treated me like a brother. Thank you to all.
I'm a regular on PoA. I ever thought this could happen to me, but brothers, it did, and it can happen to you. Get your PSA tested.
A raised PSA from a routine physical brought me to a urologist. 1 week later I had a prostate biopsy (Un-fun. Plus, since I'm at a teaching hospital, I had an audience.) Four days later, on March 22, I got the call: prostate cancer. That's the bad news. Now the relatively good news: it's non-aggressive, and very low on the Gleason score scale. And I'm young (51).
I met the urologist yesterday, along with a resident, a nursing team, and a designated nurse coordinator in a large, state of the art teaching hospital cancer center. I looked at other patients and realized I am really one of the fortunate ones. We spoke about the disease, all of the treatment options, and the risks involved. I will be going the surgery route. I will get a 2nd opinion, but for those who know about such things, the key is to have someone who has done a LOT of these surgeries. My urologist is a professor and urology department chair. He has been doing these for 25 years, and does over 2 of them a week himself, and his total is around 1,300. He was also up front with statistics on all of his patients in terms of risks and side effects of this very complex surgery. I haven't found the "Consumer Reports" on prostate surgeons, but I feel like I'm in good hands.
One catch: I need to shed 25 pounds before he'll do the surgery. As my wife said in the meeting: "DONE!" I have never - ever - had such motivation to lose weight, which will have long-term benefits well beyond getting my prostate removed. At a minimum I'll be able to carry 4 more gallons of fuel when I get back in the air!
So, I have a weight check in 6 weeks, and if I'm showing appropriate progress, we'll schedule surgery for July. I am grounded for now, and may miss AirVenture this year, but I know these things are temporary.
My wife and daughter are taking this journey with me. I've got a friend who has gone though this 2 years ago, who told me that treatment is like fraternity hazing for a pretty large fraternity that you want to be in for a long time. I've reached out to the very kind Dr. Bruce, who told me that this is a bump in the road, not structural damage. And I've reached out to a couple other pilots who have been through this or are going though this. I've never met them, but they have both treated me like a brother. Thank you to all.
I'm a regular on PoA. I ever thought this could happen to me, but brothers, it did, and it can happen to you. Get your PSA tested.