#468 book of science by AP--- I hope to solve the riddle of why prostate gland enlarges // Medical Science by Archimedes Plutonium

26 views
Skip to first unread message

Archimedes Plutonium

unread,
Mar 12, 2026, 4:40:04 AM (6 days ago) Mar 12
to Plutonium Atom Universe
I think I might have some advantage over other medical scientists as I look at the problem from the viewpoint of Electromagnetism and what gets enlarged in electromagnetism and its laws of physics.

But, on the other hand, I have a dismal record of even diagnoses of recent medical problems.

Back in 2024 I had a Shingles attack. And I first thought it was bedbugs. Laughable, yes. And here in March 2026 I am thinking of finding out what causes prostate gland enlargement. 

Almost a week ago, I had an attack in urination where I felt a burning sensation and just dribbles come out. So my first diagnosis was--- was it something I ate or drank??? Well, I recently decided to consume a jug of Raw Honey, and ate, drank a fair proportion. Looking up in the web and see others complaining that raw honey causes urine problems.

Days go by and the problem stays the same, even as I was drinking cranberry juice. 

More action on my part-- so I call my Old-timer friends to see if they experienced burning sensation in urination. And it was mentioned Urinary Tract Infection a bacterial infection and I need antibiotics of Amoxicillin. So, well, I better rush to the clinic and get rid of this infection.

Thinking, can an infection eat up my bladder and penis like worms eating up???????

So, I get to the clinic and they run urine tests and I find out----- NO, no infection.

But back to the same problem I had in 2021 a thulium TURP that burned away part of my prostrate in hopes I could urinate better. After the operation, I was not satisfied. For it seemed to me that I was almost in the same shape as before the TURP.

What I am contemplating now, is a total removal of the Prostate Gland.

It is perhaps the case that prostate glands get bigger and bigger as the "Old Man in the Troup" every hour, gets up and throws more wood on the campfire and takes a look out of enemies of the tribe.

It may be a evolutionary issue, but still it must boil down to a chemical and electromagnetic issue.

With my record of diagnoses as shown above, so poor, I is likely I will not solve the problem.

But well worth a try.

#468 book of science by AP--- I hope to solve the riddle of why prostate gland enlarges // Medical Science  by Archimedes Plutonium

AP, King of Science

Archimedes Plutonium

unread,
Mar 13, 2026, 3:21:15 AM (5 days ago) Mar 13
to Plutonium Atom Universe
I probably need to know how these organs interconnect with their tubes. The bladder, the urethra, prostate gland, penis, testicles, seminal vesicle.

At the moment I am trying to figure out how in the world in a TURP, do they get the burning torch up there to burn away at the prostate gland and the burnt parts vaporized out of the rectum.

Maybe this would also be a good exercise for plumbers, to figure this out.

AP

Archimedes Plutonium

unread,
Mar 13, 2026, 3:25:45 AM (5 days ago) Mar 13
to Plutonium Atom Universe
I am wondering if at some stage of old age in males, that it is better to never masterbate again, in that the seminal fluid can cake up crystallize and form stones, like a kidney stone.


--- quoting Wikipedia---


Prostate


Details

Precursor

Endodermic evaginations of the urethraurogenital sinus

System

Male reproductive system

Artery

Internal pudendal arteryinferior vesical artery, and middle rectal artery

Vein

Prostatic venous plexuspudendal plexusvesical plexusinternal iliac vein

Nerve

Inferior hypogastric plexus

Lymph

Internal iliac lymph nodes

Identifiers

Latin

prostata

Greek

προστάτης

MeSH

D011467

TA98

A09.3.08.001

TA2

3637

FMA

9600

Anatomical terminology

The prostate is an accessory gland of the male reproductive system and a muscle-driven mechanical switch between urination and ejaculation. It is found in all male mammals.[1] It differs between species anatomically, chemically, and physiologically. Anatomically, the prostate is found below the bladder, with the urethra passing through it. It is described in gross anatomy as consisting of lobes and in microanatomy by zone. It is surrounded by an elastic, fibromuscular capsule and contains glandular and connective tissue.

The prostate produces and contains fluid that forms part of semen, the substance emitted during ejaculation as part of the male sexual response. This prostatic fluid is slightly alkaline, and milky or white in appearance. The alkalinity of semen helps neutralize the acidity of the vaginal tract, prolonging the lifespan of sperm. The prostatic fluid is expelled in the first part of ejaculate, together with most of the sperm, because of the action of smooth muscle tissue within the prostate. In comparison with the few spermatozoa expelled together with mainly seminal vesicular fluid, those in prostatic fluid have better motility, longer survival, and better protection of genetic material.

Disorders of the prostate include enlargementinflammationinfection, and cancer. The word prostateis derived from Ancient Greek prostátēs (προστάτης), meaning "one who stands before", "protector", "guardian", with the term originally used to describe the seminal vesicles.

Structure

The prostate is an exocrine gland of the male reproductive system. In adults, it is about the size of a walnut,[2] and has an average weight of about 11 grams (0.39 oz), usually ranging between 7 and 16 grams (0.25–0.56 oz).[3] The prostate is located in the pelvis. It sits below the urinary bladder and surrounds the urethra. The part of the urethra passing through it is called the prostatic urethra, which joins with the two ejaculatory ducts.[2] The prostate is covered in a surface called the prostatic capsule or prostatic fascia.[4]

The internal structure of the prostate has been described using both lobes and zones.[5][2] Because of the variation in descriptions and definitions of lobes, the zone classification is used more predominantly.[2]



--- end quoting Wikipedia---
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages