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			 The men in the study had come to a sexual health clinic because of 
			problems they were having after removal of a cancerous prostate 
			gland. Researchers who quizzed them about the sexual function 
			information they had received preoperatively found that the men had 
			"largely unrealistic expectations" about their sexual health after 
			the surgery, like whether they'd be able to achieve erections. 
			 
			"I think this data is some of the first to report what we see in the 
			clinic," said Dr. Joshua Meeks, a urologist affiliated with the 
			Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. 
			 
			Men with prostate cancer have several treatment options, which 
			include active surveillance, radiation and removing the gland 
			altogether. All have potential side effects, according to senior 
			study author Dr. John P. Mullhall and colleagues at Memorial Sloan 
			Kettering Cancer Center in New York City. 
			  
			  
			 
			As reported in BJU International, Mulhall and colleagues surveyed 
			336 men with sexual dysfunction roughly three months after a 
			prostate removal operation known as a radical prostatectomy. About 
			two-thirds of the group had traditional open surgery; the rest had 
			robotic-assisted surgery. 
			 
			The average age was 64. Most of the men - about 88 percent of open 
			surgery and 91 percent of robotic surgery patients - said they'd 
			been able to have sex before surgery. 
			 
			But only 38 percent knew whether they'd had nerve sparing surgery, 
			which helps preserves sexual function. And only half of the patients 
			realized the surgery would take away their ability to ejaculate. 
			 
			Less than 10 percent knew their penis length might decrease after 
			surgery. 
			 
			Few men in either group were aware of the potential for changes in 
			orgasms and pain or incontinence during orgasms. 
			 
			The study didn't analyze the information patients received from 
			their doctors before the surgery, so the researchers can't 
			distinguish between what patients were told and what they 
			remembered. 
			 
			Still, the results show that some men may not retain information 
			from their doctor about the risks of prostate removal, said Meeks, 
			who was not involved with the new study. 
			
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			"I think it really highlights why it’s important to have their 
			spouse there, because I think having another set of ears is 
			incredibly helpful," he told Reuters Health. 
			 
			Dr. Daniel Shoskes, a urologist at the Cleveland Clinic who also 
			wasn't involved in the study, told Reuters Health the conclusions 
			fit with what his team has known for some time. 
			In fact, the Cleveland Clinic has started a half-day class for men 
			undergoing prostate removal to educate them about the surgery and 
			rehabilitation. The hope, said Shoskes, is that the classes will 
			"have an impact on patient retention and satisfaction with the 
			surgery." 
			 
			Shoskes, who also was not involved with the new research, added, "It 
			is human and normal to forget what has been told to you. In some 
			cases, it’s the surgeon that needs to do a better job" delivering 
			the information. 
			 
			The study's lead author did not respond to a request for comment. In 
			their paper, however, the study team also emphasizes the need to 
			better prepare men for these operations. The study findings, they 
			write, "should give us reason to think about our approach to the 
			education of the patient prior to radical prostatectomy." 
			  
			
			  
			 
			Patients "are not remembering or appreciating the information the 
			way that it is intended" and undertake the operation with mistaken 
			expectations regarding their sexual health, they add. 
			 
			SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Ob43QJ BJU International, online December 21, 
			2015. 
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