Brookie Bob
"I come back to you now at the turn of the tide"
Mark - hopefully you had it done robotically (look it up) - they can often preserve the entire urethral length, which helps a lot with post-operative urinary continence. Otherwise - not a big issue, most patients recover well with minimal issues regardless.Mark,
Once the catheter is removed, you’ll feel much better, a lot more control; the one thing that you’ll probably realise is that things are a bit shorter initially, due to them cutting your urethra, only a millimetre or 2 for me, but for you, probably a couple of inches, so you‘ll be working with only 10” or so for now.
Good luck with the PSA test, they’ll never tell you it’s zero, apparently for legal reasons, but if it’s 0.001(or so), then you’ll be fine.
Enjoy your convalescence, remember, chocolate, alcohol, comfort food and plenty of TV(repeats of the 2008 GF are best); these are the keys to the successful recovery of a champion athlete
If it's any consolation, most males will have some evidence of prostate cancer by the age of 80 (80% or more), as determined by autopsy, regardless of what takes you. I know that sounds a bit depressing to most, but take it this way, folks - if you're male, you'll probably get it at some point. Don't panic, get tested regularly, get early treatment - live long and prosper.