This straightforward outpatient treatment can be performed under local anesthesia.2It’s the only leading BPH procedure that does not require cutting, heating or removal of prostate tissue.3,4 Rapid relief and recovery in days, not months2,3 ...
2c), (2) computed tomography (CT) scan of prostate (Fig. 2d), and (3) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the prostate (Fig. 2e), as well as the symptomatology of patients over time. Each imaging technique demonstrates the increased opening of the prostatic urethra thereby reducing ...