Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia

BPH: what it is, why it causes symptoms, and how we treat it.

The enlarged prostate is one of the most common conditions we see. Here's the full range of options — from lifestyle changes to medication to surgery — explained plainly.

Quick Answer
BPH (benign prostatic hyperplasia) is non-cancerous growth of the prostate gland, which is extremely common in men over 50. The growing prostate can squeeze the urethra and make urination difficult. BPH is not prostate cancer and having BPH doesn't increase your cancer risk. Treatment ranges from doing nothing, to medications, to surgery — and the right choice depends on how much your symptoms bother you.

What BPH actually is

The prostate is a walnut-sized gland that sits below the bladder and surrounds the urethra — the tube that carries urine out of the body. Starting in the 40s and continuing for the rest of life, the prostate slowly grows. For some men, this growth is uneventful. For others, the growing prostate squeezes the urethra and obstructs the normal flow of urine.

About 50% of men in their 50s and 90% of men in their 80s have BPH. But not every man with BPH has symptoms, and not every man with symptoms needs treatment. The key question is always: how much are symptoms actually affecting your quality of life?

Common symptoms

Doctors group BPH symptoms into two categories:

Obstructive symptoms (related to the blocked flow)

Irritative symptoms (related to the overworked bladder)

How BPH is diagnosed

Evaluation starts simple and adds tests only as needed:

Treatment options — from simplest to most involved

1. Watchful waiting

If symptoms are mild and not bothering you much, the right answer may be to do nothing for now — just monitor. BPH doesn't always get worse; some men's symptoms stabilize or even improve with time.

2. Lifestyle changes

3. Medications

Two main drug classes, often used together:

Medications work well for many men — but they also have to be taken forever, and the effect can diminish over time. Many men eventually want an alternative.

4. Office-based procedures

5. Surgery

For larger prostates, severe symptoms, complications from BPH (retention, stones, kidney damage), or when minimally invasive options don't work:

When surgery becomes the right answer

We usually consider a procedure when:

One important thing

BPH is not prostate cancer. They are two separate conditions. However, both become more common with age, and many men have both. That's why we screen for cancer (with PSA) as part of a BPH workup, and why we continue periodic cancer screening even after BPH is treated.

When to call

Call us promptly if you can't urinate at all, have blood in your urine, have a fever with urinary symptoms, or notice worsening symptoms despite medication. Severe retention is an emergency.

📞 (801) 432-3022
This page is for general educational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Always consult Dr. Childs or another qualified health provider with questions about your specific situation.