
Here's hoping they have caught it early and he makes a full recovery.
Always struck me as one of the good guys...
Ho-ho...yes!
You're right...
I was diagnosed with Prostate cancer 10 years ago at the age of 59houseboy wrote: ↑Sun Feb 14, 2021 11:25 pmMy doctor explained to me that prostate cancer works so slow that someone of Tarbys age would probably die of old age first. Ian Mckellan has had it for years and won’t have treatment. I had a scare about 15 years ago but turned out it was not cancer but I found out a lot about it. Not nice but very curable if caught.
I had two biopsies. They are shite aren’t they? Actually technically they are the polar opposite of shite in a way.mkmel wrote: ↑Mon Feb 15, 2021 4:45 amI was diagnosed with Prostate cancer 10 years ago at the age of 59
My Urologist said that he had some not good news and some good news for me.
The not good news was that I had Prostate cancer and the good news was that at my age I would very probably die of something else before the Prostate cancer got me.
And 10 years later after 4 horrendous Biopsies and numerous Scans I am still here![]()
houseboy wrote: ↑Sun Feb 14, 2021 11:25 pmMy doctor explained to me that prostate cancer works so slow that someone of Tarbys age would probably die of old age first. Ian Mckellan has had it for years and won’t have treatment. I had a scare about 15 years ago but turned out it was not cancer but I found out a lot about it. Not nice but very curable if caught.
Super news Targetman. Glad to hear that. The sad thing about prostate cancer is so many blokes die from it (about 10k a year last I read) because they are too proud (for want of a better term) to see a doctor after they turn fifty or if they start having ‘problems’ at night. The screening sessions at the club may well have saved lives. Get yourselves checked out chaps.Targetman wrote: ↑Mon Feb 15, 2021 11:13 amCurable if caught early enough, particularly if it hasn't escaped from the prostate gland. I was diagnosed with it after attending one of the first screening sessions at Turf Moor organised by Barry Kilby.
There are quite a few other posters on this site who I have got to know who also were diagnosed with it.
I remember being in an office at Burnley General with the senior MacMillan Nurse at the time, she was confirming to me that I had it, her exact words were.......
"If you were told that you had to have cancer but given the choice which type you were going to have then prostate cancer would be the best type to choose".....
Might seem to be an unusual statement but she went on to explain that it was a very slow moving cancer and so I had every chance of beating it, particularly as I was in the early stages.
That was almost 5 years ago and my consultant, who I have been seeing every 6 months, is very hopeful that he will be able to discharge me later this year.