Urology treatments
Compare urology procedures by condition, setting, recovery, and decision point.
Searchers looking for urology procedures need more than a list. They need to know whether a test, office procedure, medication, surgery, or second opinion fits the problem they are trying to solve.
Patient treatment map
Use the treatment type to find the right guide before an appointment.
Diagnostic tests and workups
Tests answer what is happening before a procedure is chosen. Patients usually need to know why the test is being ordered, where it happens, and what the results change.
BPH and enlarged prostate treatments
BPH pages need to compare medication, office procedures, minimally invasive options, and surgery without pushing one procedure before evaluation.
Kidney stone treatments
Stone treatment depends on stone size, location, infection risk, pain control, imaging, and whether a stent or procedure is needed.
Cancer and biopsy procedures
Cancer procedure pages should prepare patients for staging, pathology, second opinions, and which specialists may be involved.
Men's sexual and reproductive health
These pages need clear candidacy, safety, recovery, cost, and fertility questions before a patient books the wrong appointment type.
Bladder and incontinence treatments
Bladder treatment pages should separate urgency, leakage, retention, infection, pain, and cancer workups before recommending a test or procedure.
Full clinical map
Browse every condition area and procedure path.
Prostate
A urologist may review PSA trend, urinary symptoms, prostate size, imaging, biopsy history, cancer risk, medications, and procedure fit.
Kidney and renal
A urologist may review imaging, kidney function, stone history, obstruction, infection risk, mass size, and procedure options.
Bladder and urinary tract
A urologist may review urine tests, imaging, cystoscopy need, bladder emptying, medications, infection history, and cancer risk.
Men's sexual and reproductive health
A urologist may review medications, vascular risk, testosterone, fertility goals, prior surgery, sexual function, and treatment options.
Low testosterone and androgen deficiency
A urologist may review morning testosterone labs, repeat testing, symptoms, pituitary labs, fertility goals, PSA, blood counts, and risk factors.
Urologic cancer and oncology
A urologist may review pathology, imaging, staging, surgery fit, surveillance plan, urinary effects, sexual effects, and referrals.
Robotic and minimally invasive surgery
A urologist may review diagnosis, imaging, anatomy, prior surgeries, procedure alternatives, expected recovery, and surgeon volume.
Treatment to appointment
A procedure page should prepare the visit, not replace it.
Use treatment pages to understand options, risks, recovery, and cost questions. A urologist decides what fits after reviewing your symptoms, tests, imaging, and medical history.
