Senior Series | Aquablation with Dr. Stephen Beck
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- Опубликовано: 11 июл 2023
- June is Men’s Health Month, and our board-certified urologist, Dr. Stephen Beck took a few minutes to discuss Aquablation Therapy, a new type of surgical treatment for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH).
At Logansport Memorial Hospital, we are proud to be among the first in the north central Indiana region to offer this advanced, minimally invasive treatment.
To schedule an appointment with Dr. Beck, please call 574-753-2222.
To learn more about Aquablation Therapy visit www.logansportmemorial.org/aq....
I'm 71 and just had this done. What a relief, peeing like a racehorse again...
had this done 2 weeks ago. catheter for 48hrs, then removed. some bleeding when I pee. now 2 weeks later , less blood, less burning but peeing better and better. getting better and better, one day at a time. no regrets....
My dad went to Dr Beck. He seemed like a good doctor and a nice man.
Thanks for an interesting video. One small suggestion, medical term is hyperplasia, not hypertrophy in the video for BPH. Do you find it necessary to use a loop to either cauterize bleeders or clean up strands of tissue left from the pressure jets? Good explanation and thanks again.
How would you compare Acquablation to Holap?
I had this surgery done a year ago and side effect is Retrograde ejaculation and I am only 53
Did Dr. Beck do your procedure?
@@iactedtreasurer3874 no not Dr Beck , it was Dr Gregory M. Bernstein who did my procedure.
But the trade-off is, 'you can pee like a teenager'. Right?
I took these medications for years. They have terrible side effects. I wish someone offered me rezum instead.
I'm on coumadin for a mechanical heart valve. My past surgeries allowed me to go off of the coumadin for 3 days. Is it still possible for me to get the aquablation treatment? If not what's the difference between a the aquablation, holep or TURP procedures when it comes to bleeding? From what I have seen, it is common practice to cauterize any bleeders after the main procedure has been completed. Why is the bleeding (off of thinners) issue so critical for aquablation and not TURP and holep? Thanks