The walnut-shaped prostate sits right underneath the bladder and is wrapped  around the urethra. The prostate, despite its location, has nothing to do with a  man’s urinary apparatus. The prostate is where it is because it’s needed for  ejaculation, and the semen passes through the same urethra as urine does. The  prostate gland’s main job is to add special fluid to the sperm before it  ejaculates from the penis. That’s why the prostate is where it’s at, and why  prostate problems interfere with the male’s ability to have sex and urinate. 
Three main types of prostate problems: enlargement, infection, and cancer.  Prostate enlargement, called benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH) is a  non-cancerous enlargement of the prostate. Although even men in their 20s can  suffer from BPH, it normally only surfaces later in life. It’s estimated that  fifty percent of all men will have BPH by reaching the age of 60, and a full  ninety- percent will suffer from BPH by age 85. When the prostate enlarges  outward, a man may not realize he has BPH unless it grows upward and puts  pressure on the bladder. But when the prostate swells inward, squeezing the  urethra, which passes through the center of the gland, he will certainly know  there’s a problem. With the prostate constricting the urinary tube, a man can  suffer from difficulty in urinating, straining to start urination, frequent  urination, getting up multiple times at night to urinate, or urgency of  urination. 
The principal medical treatment for BPH symptoms is the non-invasive surgery  called trans urethral resection of the prostate, also commonly referred to as  reaming out the prostate. There are also drugs like Proscar used to shrink the  prostate, but these drugs have not been that effective and have negative side  effects. Prostate infections, or prostatitis, are fairly common in males after  their teenage years. Symptoms of prostate inflections can include frequent and  or painful urination, other urinary problems, or pain during sex. 
The most serious prostate problem is cancer. Cancer of the prostate is the  second most frequently diagnosed cancer in males after skin cancer. It is the  second most common cause of cancer death in males after lung cancer. The early  symptoms of prostate cancer are extremely similar to those of BPH, including  getting up often at night to urinate; urinating often, but only in small  amounts; having to wait forever for the urine flow to start; and a urinary  stream that starts and stops. These symptoms don’t mean that a person has  prostate cancer. But these or other symptoms do indicate it’s time for a  checkup.
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