We don’t talk enough about what happens after the applause fades—the “good news” of a successful removal. The thing is, millions of men undergo radical prostatectomy each year, mostly for prostate cancer, and walk out thinking the hard part is over. We're far from it.
Understanding Radical Prostatectomy: What Are You Actually Losing?
The prostate sits just below the bladder, wrapping around the urethra. It’s about the size of a walnut, sure—but its influence is massive. Its main job? Producing fluid that nourishes and transports sperm. Remove it, and you’re not just cutting tissue. You’re altering plumbing, rewiring nerves, and shifting your body’s chemical balance.
Radical prostatectomy means total removal. There are approaches—open surgery, laparoscopic, robotic—but the outcome is the same: no prostate. And no coming back from that. Surgeons may try nerve-sparing techniques, especially in younger men, but even then, the risks linger. The anatomy is delicate. Tiny nerves responsible for erections run millimeters from the prostate’s edge. Nudge them, stretch them, scar them—and you’re gambling with function.
And that’s before we get into the hormonal ripple effects. No prostate means no seminal fluid. Ejaculation? It still happens, but it’s dry. Some men find that strange. Others, deeply unsettling. It’s not infertility—that ship has sailed. It’s identity. It’s sensation. It’s the quiet moment afterward when you realize something fundamental has shifted.
How Does Prostate Removal Affect Sexual Function?
Let’s be clear about this: most men will struggle with erections after surgery. Studies show only 25% to 40% regain spontaneous erectile function within two years—even with nerve-sparing procedures. That number drops further with age or pre-existing conditions like diabetes.
Medications like sildenafil (Viagra) help some, but not all. Vacuum devices, penile injections, even implants—they’re options, yes, but they’re also acknowledgments of loss. It’s not the same. Never is. You can’t just pop a pill and go back to how things were at 35. And that’s exactly where the emotional toll begins.
What Happens to Fertility and Ejaculation?
You can’t father children naturally after prostate removal. Period. The prostate and seminal vesicles produce most of the ejaculate. Cut those out, and you get what’s known as dry orgasm. The climax might still feel good—intense, even—but there’s no release, no visible proof. Men describe it as “unsatisfying,” “disconnected,” or “like a sneeze that never comes.”
For younger men, especially those without children, this can be devastating. Sperm banking before surgery is an option, but it’s not always discussed. And it’s not free—costs range from $500 to $1,200, with annual storage fees. Insurance? Often doesn’t cover it.
Urinary Incontinence: The Unseen Burden After Surgery
Imagine coughing and wetting your pants. Laughing at a joke and needing to change your underwear. That’s stress incontinence, and it affects up to 20% of men after prostatectomy. Immediate leakage? Fairly common in the first few months. But for some, it never fully goes away.
The urinary sphincter—tiny muscles that control flow—can be damaged during surgery. Even if the surgeon is precise, swelling, scar tissue, or nerve disruption can interfere. Pelvic floor exercises (Kegels) help. So do specialized pads, medications, or in severe cases, surgical slings or artificial sphincters. The artificial sphincter implant? It’s a mechanical device inflated and deflated by hand. Sounds like sci-fi, but it’s real. And it’s used in about 2% of post-prostatectomy patients.
But here’s what no one tells you: the shame. It’s not the medical side. It’s the social invisibility of peeing yourself at a barbecue. It’s avoiding long car rides. It’s buying dark pants in bulk. And because men don’t talk about it much? Suffering quietly becomes the norm.
How Long Does Incontinence Last, Really?
Most men see improvement within 6 to 12 months. But “improvement” isn’t “cured.” One study tracking 1,200 patients found that at 18 months post-op, 88% were continent during the day—but only 76% at night. And “continent” here often means “one protective pad per day.” Is that acceptable? For some, yes. For others, it’s a daily reminder of what was lost.
Can Pelvic Floor Therapy Make a Difference?
Yes—but only if you do it. And most men don’t, not consistently. A 2022 trial showed that patients who started pelvic floor exercises 4 weeks before surgery had 40% better continence rates at 6 months than those who didn’t. Yet adherence? Below 30%. It’s not hard—just awkward. And awkward keeps people away.
Psychological Impact: It’s More Than Just Physical
You’d think beating cancer would bring pure relief. But emotions don’t work like that. Anxiety, depression, and body image issues are common. One survey found that 34% of prostatectomy patients reported symptoms of depression within the first year. Not because they regret the surgery—but because no one prepared them for the aftermath.
And that’s exactly where the medical system fails. We focus on survival rates—85% 10-year survival for localized cancer—but ignore quality of life. We talk PSA levels, not intimacy. We celebrate “cancer-free” but skip the part where you can’t get an erection or you wear Depends.
Because it’s not just sex. It’s confidence. It’s feeling like a man. It’s the look your partner gives you when you apologize—again—for leaking. And sometimes, that look isn’t pity. It’s distance.
Does Partner Support Influence Recovery?
It does. Men with supportive partners report better sexual and emotional outcomes. But support isn’t always there. Some relationships fracture. One study from the Mayo Clinic noted a 15% increase in separation rates among men post-prostatectomy. Is it the surgery’s fault? Not directly. But it’s a stress test—one many couples don’t expect.
Alternatives to Surgery: Is Removal Always Necessary?
Here’s a truth often buried in pamphlets: for many men, especially older ones with slow-growing cancer, active surveillance might be smarter. It’s not doing nothing. It’s monitoring—PSA tests, biopsies, MRI scans—while avoiding surgery’s risks altogether.
And let’s be real: prostate cancer is often slow. A man diagnosed at 70 with low-risk disease has a higher chance of dying from heart disease than from his cancer. So why remove the prostate and risk incontinence and impotence? Especially when data shows that for low-risk cases, 10-year survival is nearly identical between surgery and monitoring—94% vs 92%.
That said, radiation therapy is another option. It avoids surgery but brings its own side effects: bowel urgency, rectal bleeding, and yes, still some sexual dysfunction. But incontinence rates? Lower—around 5% compared to 15%-20% with surgery.
Active surveillance vs surgery: which offers better quality of life? For many, the answer is clear. But fear drives decisions. And fear rarely listens to statistics.
What Is Focal Therapy, and Could It Be the Future?
Focal therapy—targeting only the tumor, not the whole prostate—is experimental but promising. Techniques like high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) or cryoablation destroy cancer cells with heat or cold. Recovery? Faster. Side effects? Milder. But long-term data? Still lacking. We don’t yet know if it prevents recurrence as well as full removal. But for select patients, it might offer a middle path—less radical, less ruinous.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will I Ever Get Full Bladder Control Back?
Most men do—eventually. But “full” is relative. If you define it as zero leaks, zero pads, the answer is no for about 1 in 8. If you mean “manageable,” then yes, likely within a year. But patience is non-negotiable. And pelvic floor work? Non-negotiable too.
Can I Still Have Sex After Prostate Removal?
You can. But it’s different. Erections may need help—pills, pumps, injections. Orgasms are dry. Desire? Often drops, at least temporarily. But intimacy? That’s yours to rebuild. With time, communication, and sometimes therapy, many men find new ways to connect. Not the same. But still meaningful.
Does Prostate Removal Shorten Your Life?
No—not if done for cancer. In fact, it can extend it. But if you’re talking about quality, not length? That’s a different calculation. Living longer is good. Living well? That’s the real goal.
The Bottom Line
Prostate removal can save your life. No argument there. For aggressive cancer, it’s often the best shot. But it’s not a minor procedure. The side effects aren’t “possible.” They’re probable. And downplaying them does men a disservice.
I am convinced that too many patients agree to surgery without truly grasping the trade-offs. They hear “cancer” and freeze. They don’t ask about alternatives. They don’t prepare for the emotional fallout. And then, months later, they’re surprised by the dry orgasms, the pads, the frustration.
My recommendation? Slow down. Get a second opinion. Ask about active surveillance. Talk to men who’ve been through it—not just their doctors. Because the medical success of the surgery isn’t the full story. The real measure? How you feel a year later, in your body, in your relationships, in your skin.
Sure, you might beat cancer. But if you lose yourself in the process, what kind of victory is that? Honestly, it is unclear whether we’re doing enough to prepare men for that question. And that changes everything.