Prostate Cancer and Sex

Everyone reacts differently to having cancer both physically and emotionally.  Many men do not feel like sex during, before and after their treatment for prostate cancer. The majority of people feel very 'low' once they have been given a cancer diagnosis and feeling like this is not going to help their sex life. On the other hand, some men have an opposite reaction to their diagnosis by feeling that they should be living life to the full and enjoying their sex life to the utmost. Neither is wrong; it's just how different men cope in their own particular way.
Whichever way, this disruption to a man's sexual relationship will be difficult to tolerate. Any man who is suffering with prostate cancer should always try to remember that with time, things should change and they will not know how they will be permanently affected until their treatment has finished and things are getting back to normal. It's pointless to contemplate a sexual future until all options have been considered and treatment has been completed.

Most side effects from the treatment of prostate cancer are only temporary. For example, the fatigue and diarrhoea which is a side effect of radiotherapy usually begins to wear off in the weeks following the end of a person's treatment. The effects of this treatment can be wearying, however if it can be tolerated the effects do wear off after the treatment has been completed.

If a man is less interested in sex, it can be due to a number of reasons. These include the effects of an Orchidectomy or hormone treatment. A lowered interest in sex cannot be treated like it usually would be by the use of testosterone injections or patches.  This would be counter productive due to some treatments for the prostate cancer being female hormone based. Giving a man the male hormone testosterone would accelerate the growth of the tumor and would negate the effects of the treatment being given.
Changing the treatment itself may be a benefit as a lack of sexual interest is less likely with anti-androgens such as bicalutamide. Therefore any man undergoing treatment should consider discussing their options with their health specialist.

Side effects such as these may be very difficult to live with and how a man looked upon his sex life before diagnosis will play a major role. Whether or not a man has a partner will also determine how he takes to the changes in his sex life.
It is very important that issues such as these are discussed between partners so enable you both to come to terms with the major changes you will face. Its important to remember that a diagnosis of prostate cancer affects a man's partner as well as himself.

Symptoms which might be a side effect of orchidectomy or hormone therapy may include hot flushes and sweats. These symptoms are usually at their worst when a man has just bean hormone treatment or had their testicles removed, although they can get better as the body adjusts.

Prostate cancer news on the Web

Prostate Cancer: The Disease’s ‘Cell of Origin’ Found
Prostate cancer affects hundreds of thousands of men in the US every year, causing tens of thousands of deaths. A recent finding by researchers at the University of California Los Angeles may have made a discovery that will change that. The Prostate Cancer Foundation reports that the scientists at the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center have found the ‘cell of origin’, which is the type of ...

Prostate Cancer: A New Ground Zero
A type of prostate cell that has been largely ignored by cancer researchers can, in fact, trigger malignant prostate cancer, according to new studies by Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) scientists and their colleagues. HHMI researcher Owen N. Witte and his colleagues at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) found that the somewhat overlooked prostate basal cell can spawn tumors ...

Prostate Cancer 'Cell of Origin' Identified
For researchers, a key to studying any cancer is finding its "cell of origin." Now scientists at the University of California at Los Angeles say they've found just that -- a specific type of cell that gives rise to prostate cancer.

Costly New Prostate Cancer Drug Works In Mysterious Ways
A new prostate cancer treatment that uses a patient's own white blood cells to effectively create a personalized vaccine has been approved. But no one really knows how it works.

Prostate cancer 'cell' identified
A cell that could be the "mother" of all prostate tumours has been identified by scientists. Samples of the "basal" cells taken from healthy human prostate tissue triggered cancer in mice with suppressed immune systems.

Canines Used To Sniff Out Prostate Cancer
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men, with about 1 in 6 affected. Like so many other cancers, catching it early is the key. Now, doctors have discovered a new means of early detection using dogs.

Cancer Vaccine: 4 Months of Life Worth $100K?
Prostate cancer vaccine, Provenge, adds 4 months to life, at a pricetag of 100K. The first-ever approved cancer vaccine, Provenge offers hope to men with advanced prostate cancer, but the high cost of this new treatment raises healthcare policy questions. Prostate cancer - Sipuleucel-T - Cancer - Cancer vaccine - Health

Aggressive prostate cancer tend to retain denser bones
Men who develop prostate cancer, especially the more aggressive and dangerous forms that spread throughout the body, tend to retain denser bones as they age than men who stay free of the disease, suggests new research from Johns Hopkins and the National Institute on Aging (NIA), part of the National Institutes of Health.

Dendreon’s Prostate Cancer Drug Extends Life in Published Study
Dendreon Corp.’s prostate cancer vaccine, Provenge, extended lives by 4.1 months in a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine. The data, released previously, led to the drug’s U.S. approval in April.

Prostate cancer research advance
A CELL that could be the “mother” of all prostate tumours has been identified by scientists.