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Microwave
Treatments for Enlarged Prostate Cause Blood Pressure Surges
Tuesday, April 8, 2008
Monitoring, medication
continuance needed to reduce cardiovascular risks
Audio
Credit: Mayo Clinic / Rochester
Many men who receive
microwave therapy for enlarged prostates experience significant
surges in blood pressure that could raise their risk of a heart
attack or stroke, according to new research findings published
recently in Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
The Mayo Clinic-led study of
185 consecutive patients who received transurethral microwave
therapy at four medical centers found that 42 percent experienced
systolic blood pressure surges of more than 30 mm Hg, while 5
percent had surges of more than 70 mm Hg.
"Men who are candidates
for this minimally invasive microwave therapy tend also to be at
higher risk for cardiac events," says Lance Mynderse, M.D.,
the Mayo Clinic urologist who authored the study. "Blood
pressure surges of the magnitude identified in this study are
troubling side effects of treatment that need to be monitored and
managed."
Benign prostatic hyperplasia
(BPH), or an enlarged prostate gland, is a condition affecting
half of men over age 50 and 80 percent of those over 70. Symptoms
include difficult urination, sudden urges to urinate and
inability to empty the bladder. BPH often is treated with
medication and in severe cases open surgery may be necessary, but
since 1997 transurethral microwave therapy has been a
less-invasive option.
Transurethral microwave therapy
involves using a catheter to place a microwave device within the
prostate, which is then heated to destroy excess tissue.
Approximately 70,000 such procedures are performed each year,
usually in an office setting and typically involving patients
from 50 to 85 years old.
"This patient population
is at high risk of cardiovascular disease," explains
Benjamin Larson, a medical student at Cleveland Clinic who is the
lead author of the Mayo Clinic Proceedings paper. "Anecdotal
reports of adverse blood pressure events during and after
transurethral microwave therapy, and our own experience, led us
to look back at the records to identify potential problems among
these patients whose blood pressure had been monitored."
The authors say the study
findings should not necessarily deter physicians and their
patients from using one of the six FDA-approved devices for
transurethral microwave therapy, but they should take reasonable
precautions given the strong possibility of blood pressure
surges. "Blood pressure monitoring should be a standard part
of the procedure. Blood pressure readings should be taken
throughout the procedure, multiple times. Unfortunately, that has
not always been the practice for this office-based therapy,"
Dr. Mynderse explains. "Monitoring will enable physicians to
identify the problem and adjust treatment. Patients also should
be encouraged to continue their anti-hypertensive medications,
particularly beta blockers, as they prepare for the procedure."
Besides Larson and Dr.
Mynderse, other authors of the paper include Thayne Larson, M.D.;
Virend Somers, M.D., Ph.D.; Michael Jaff, D.O. and William Evans,
D.O.
Source:
Mayo Clinic / Rochester

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