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Enlarged Prostate (BPH)

An enlarged prostate is driven by decades of hormonal and metabolic signals. We support that terrain alongside proper urological evaluation — never instead of it.

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Acupuncture for fertility, PMS, menstrual disorders, PCOS, endometriosis, menopause, and urinary health. Comprehensive women's health care in downtown Seattle.

When the Plumbing Slows Down

An enlarged prostate — benign prostatic hyperplasia, or BPH — is one of the most common conditions of aging in people with a prostate. The frequent urination, weak stream, and waking through the night are not dangerous in themselves, but they erode sleep and quality of life. The body is not malfunctioning; the prostate is responding to decades of hormonal and inflammatory signals, and those can be influenced.

This is the GoodMedizen lens. The body is not malfunctioning. It is responding accurately to the information it is being given. Change the inputs and the response begins to change with them.

What BPH Actually Is

The prostate sits around the urethra, so when it enlarges it squeezes that channel and disrupts urination. The growth is driven over time by hormonal shifts — particularly the conversion of testosterone to DHT and the changing balance of testosterone to estrogen with age — along with inflammation and metabolic factors. It is benign and distinct from prostate cancer, though the symptoms can overlap, which is exactly why proper evaluation matters.

What Is Actually Driving It

  • Hormonal shifts with age, including DHT and the rising estrogen-to-testosterone ratio
  • Chronic inflammation in the prostate
  • Insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome, strongly linked to BPH
  • Poor circulation to the pelvis
  • Lifestyle factors — diet, activity, and weight

Why It Gets Missed (and Why Evaluation Matters)

BPH is often managed with medications that relax or shrink the prostate, which help symptoms but do not touch the hormonal and metabolic drivers. More importantly, urinary symptoms must be properly evaluated, because BPH and prostate cancer can produce similar symptoms. This is not something to self-diagnose.

We support the hormonal, inflammatory, and metabolic terrain behind BPH — alongside proper urological evaluation, never instead of it.

Signs and Patterns

  • Frequent urination, especially at night
  • A weak or interrupted stream
  • Difficulty starting urination
  • A sense of incomplete emptying
  • Urgency
  • Dribbling afterward
  • In more advanced cases, inability to urinate, which needs prompt care

How We Look at It — The Testing

  • Coordinate with urology — PSA and proper prostate evaluation to characterize the symptoms and rule out other causes
  • Hormones — testosterone, DHT where available, estradiol, DHEA, and SHBG, read to optimal, since the balance drives the growth
  • Metabolic — HbA1c, fasting glucose and insulin, and the triglyceride-to-HDL ratio, given the strong link to metabolic syndrome
  • Inflammation — hs-CRP
  • Foundations — 25-OH vitamin D around 60 to 70, zinc (concentrated in the prostate), and RBC magnesium

Broad baseline labs do not have to be expensive. Services such as Function Health let patients obtain large workups affordably, and we have no financial stake in that — we would rather your budget go toward care than toward lab markups. For targeted functional testing we order through Diagnostic Solutions (GI-MAP) for the microbiome, Quicksilver Scientific for heavy metals, and through Fullscript where it serves you best, with every marker read against optimal ranges rather than the wide line between “normal” and “abnormal.”

The Chinese Medicine Lens

Chinese medicine reads the urinary symptoms of aging as Kidney deficiency, since the Kidney governs the lower urinary tract and water metabolism and naturally declines with age, frequently with damp-heat pooling in the lower burner and, where the stream is obstructed, blood stasis. Treatment tonifies the Kidney, clears damp-heat, and moves stasis.

The Kidney’s governance of urination and aging maps directly onto how BPH develops over decades.

How Acupuncture and Functional Medicine Help

Acupuncture supports urinary function and pelvic circulation, calms the system, and addresses the Kidney foundation, and it has been studied for the urinary symptoms of an enlarged prostate.

The functional work addresses the terrain behind the growth: supporting hormonal balance and the shifting estrogen-to-testosterone ratio, lowering inflammation, improving insulin sensitivity, supplying prostate-supportive nutrients such as zinc, and adjusting lifestyle.

Care That Works With Your Urologist

This is essential: urinary symptoms need proper evaluation, BPH and prostate cancer can look similar, and an inability to urinate or blood in the urine needs prompt care. Medications and procedures have their place. We coordinate with your urologist and never advise stopping a prescribed medication.

Your Body Isn’t Broken

If you have spent years being told your labs look normal while you clearly do not feel normal, you have not been imagining it. With an enlarged prostate, the work is to support the hormonal and metabolic terrain behind the growth, alongside proper urological care, not only to manage the symptoms. Your body is not broken. The support has just been missing.

At GoodMedizen in downtown Seattle, we treat the system driving the condition, not only the symptoms it produces.

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