After HoLEP Surgery

Recovery after HoLEP — week by week.

A practical, honest guide to what the first 8 weeks of recovery look like. What's expected, what's not, and when to call.

Quick Answer
Most HoLEP patients have the catheter out within 24 hours, go home the same day or the next morning, and return to desk work within a few days to a week. Blood in the urine is expected and comes and goes for 4–6 weeks. Urgency and frequency are also expected early on — the bladder needs time to retrain itself after years of working against obstruction. By 6–12 weeks, most men are back to normal activity with dramatically improved urinary flow.

The first 24 hours

Day of surgery

You arrive, go through pre-op, have surgery under general anesthesia (typical duration 1–2 hours depending on prostate size), recover in PACU, and either go home the same day or overnight for observation. Most patients with routine HoLEP go home the same day.

When you leave, you'll have a Foley catheter in place — a soft tube draining urine from your bladder into a collection bag. This is normal and essential for the first several hours to let the prostate bed heal.

Catheter removal

The catheter typically comes out the next morning. A nurse removes it quickly (a few seconds, uncomfortable but not painful). You urinate into a collection container so the staff can measure volume and check that you're emptying well. Once you've urinated successfully, you're discharged.

Some patients are kept with the catheter for 1–2 extra days if the prostate was very large or if there's more bleeding than usual. This is not a setback.

Week 1

What to expect

Activity

What helps

Weeks 2–4

Things steadily improve. Expect:

Some patients experience an episode of heavier bleeding around day 10–14, when the scabbed-over tissue sloughs off. This looks alarming but is expected. Increase water intake. If you pass large clots or can't urinate, call us.

Activity

Weeks 4–8

Most men are now at or near their final result:

Your follow-up visit is usually scheduled around 4–6 weeks post-op. At that visit, Dr. Childs reviews your recovery, does a flow test and post-void residual to confirm bladder emptying, and addresses any lingering concerns.

Longer-term expectations

When to call

Call immediately for fever over 101.5°F with chills, inability to urinate at all, heavy bright-red bleeding with large clots that doesn't slow down, severe pain not controlled by medication, or any concerns you feel are urgent. For routine questions or gradual concerns, call during business hours.

📞 (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.