Can You Reduce Your PSA Levels?

Can You Reduce Your PSA Levels?

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A lot of men submit to a horrible procedure.

They get needles stuck into their bowels to penetrate the prostate and draw out a sample.

Or even more invasive biopsies.

Surgery even.

Not to mention huge worry.

All over what?

A number — a PSA score.

PSA measures a specific chemical signature that spills out into the blood when the prostate supposedly is potentially cancerous.

However, PSA itself is a normal chemical mix.

It’s part of the natural ejaculate process, and scientists also believe it’s part of the fertilization process.

So, the question of a PSA score rising and what causes it is not a question of “is it cancer?”

Even if it is cancer, prostate cancer is in almost all cases very benign.

Only about 2% or 3% of affected men will eventually die from prostate cancer.
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Most of the men will die from the treatments for prostate cancer or from old age.

Or they’ll die from problems other than prostate cancer.

The question is, what if you don’t treat your prostate cancer at all?

What if PSA levels are higher and you do nothing?

This idea isn’t the subject of very many studies.

In our Western medicine, there is great incentive to overtreat everything.

Especially with a third-party insurance company paying.

And it’s not any different in even countries with a single-payer system.

Although there is less incentive to over treat, overtreatment is the norm when it comes to prostate cancer for men.

Lifetime risks of dying from prostate cancer are close to the 3%.

There you have it.

Even if you ignore a rising PSA level, your chances of death from prostate cancer are still quite low.

Nevertheless, prostate cancer today is a great concern of men who experience a rising PSA level.

So, let’s look at what actually causes a rising PSA level other than prostate cancer.

This is a study where they tested prostate tissue and the effect of various hormones on that tissue.

They found that DHT causes the prostate to spill PSA into the bloodstream.

But it only does it when accompanied by another hormone, SHBG.

And more importantly, they also found that estrogen causes the PSA levels to increase.

The most potent form of estrogen is estradiol.

And this is much more important finding.

It shows that estradiol is the primary reason for men to experience rising PSA levels other than cancer.

It is far more common for men to have elevated estrogen levels and an elevated PSA levels as a result of that than to have prostate cancer.

If you want to lower your PSA levels, then you want to lower your estrogen.

If you lower your estrogen levels a lot of things will improve over time.

Even high blood pressure and type two diabetes can often improve.

Plus, things like weight, muscle mass, mood, and anxiety can get better with lower estrogen levels.


Matt Cook is editor-in-chief of Daily Medical Discoveries. Matt has been a full time health researcher for 26 years. ABC News interviewed Matt on sexual health issues not long ago. Matt is widely quoted on over 1,000,000 websites. He has over 300,000 daily newsletter readers. Daily Medical Discoveries finds hidden, buried or ignored medical studies through the lens of 100 years of proven science. Matt heads up the editorial team of scientists and health researchers. Each discovery is based upon primary studies from peer reviewed science sources following the Daily Medical Discoveries 7 Step Process to ensure accuracy.
What if I don’t treat my PSA-detected prostate cancer? Answers from three natural history models 
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3091266/ 

Estradiol Activates the Prostate Androgen Receptor and Prostate-specific Antigen Secretion through the Intermediacy of Sex Hormone-binding Globulin 
http://www.jbc.org/content/272/11/6838.short 

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