Searches for ‘enlarged prostate’ on the NHS website have surged after the King shared his diagnosis, new figures show.

There were 16,410 visits to the health service’s prostate enlargement page on Wednesday – equivalent to one every five seconds.

NHS England said this was 11-times more than the 1,414 hits recorded on Tuesday.

Experts believe the King’s desire to share his diagnosis of an enlarged prostate will lead to a rise in men with symptoms of the condition seeking help.

It is understood Charles, 75, was keen to share his diagnosis, in order to encourage other men who may be experiencing symptoms to get checked in line with health advice.

King Charles III will attend hospital next week to be treated for an enlarged prostate

King Charles III will attend hospital next week to be treated for an enlarged prostate 

One in every three men over the age of 50 will have symptoms of an enlarged prostate including needing to visit the toilet more frequently, with more urgency and have difficulty emptying their bladder.

The Daily Mail has led the way championing prostate health for a quarter of a century.

Since 1999, the Mail has called for better diagnosis and treatment of prostate cancer, encouraging men to stop ‘dying of embarrassment’.

It has led coverage of promising new treatments, including MRI-guided transurethral ultrasound ablation, which blasts tumours with sound waves and could also be used to treat enlarged prostates – known as benign prostatic hyperplasia.

Buckingham Palace said Charles’s condition was benign and he would be having a ‘corrective procedure’.

Ian Eardley, consultant urological surgeon in Leeds and national clinical director for NHS England, said the condition becomes more common with age and will affect up to four in five men aged 75.

‘It’s very, very common, at that age you would expect upwards of 70 per cent to 80 per cent of men to have an enlarged prostate,’ he said.

‘About half of them will have symptoms, and broadly speaking about half of them will become bothered to some extent by those symptoms.

‘To some extent it is an inevitable part of ageing for just about all men.’

Asked about whether the announcement would lead to more people seeking help, Mr Eardley said: ‘The nature of these things if it becomes public knowledge it will lead to more men seeking help. That’s a good thing.’

He said that prostate problems have traditionally had a ‘perception of being something you don’t want to talk about’ and ‘actually to be able to talk about it is a good thing, not least because the whole stack of things that we can do’.

‘The majority of men do not need an operation.

‘The majority men just need to be checked out and they will often have their symptoms improved considerably by taking one pill or two pills, something that a GP can manage quite straightforwardly,’ he added.

Meg Burgess, a specialist nurse and Prostate Cancer UK, said: ‘As the prostate gets bigger it can cause problems with emptying the bladder – if the prostate gets bigger it can squeeze on the urethra, the water pipe, and that can cause some urinary symptoms.

‘It is a benign condition, so its a non-cancerous condition.’

Ms Burgess said not all men with the condition will have surgery, adding: ‘It really depends on how much bother the symptoms are causing as to what the treatments might be.

‘In the first instance it might just be some lifestyle changes, looking at what you’re drinking, how much you’re drinking.

This NHS diagram shows how an enlarged prostate can begin to press upon the bladder and constrict the urethra a process that can cause various urinary problems

This NHS diagram shows how an enlarged prostate can begin to press upon the bladder and constrict the urethra a process that can cause various urinary problems 

‘If the symptoms are causing more bother there are some medications that can be really helpful in treating symptoms, so for many men tablets will be enough to alleviate symptoms.

‘But if medication isn’t helpful there are a number of different surgical options that can help to reduce the symptoms and improve bladder emptying.’

She said the most common surgical option is something called a transurethral resection of the prostate (turp), a surgical procedure that involves cutting away a section of the prostate.

Around 15,000 prostate resection procedures are carried out each year in England and Wales.

She said any men who are having urinary problems or are worried about their risk of prostate cancer, which usually does not have any symptoms, should get in contact with their GP.

Other victories for Daily Mail prostate campaigns include the use of MRI scans for nearly all men suspected of having prostate cancer.

In November last year, health leaders announced a first-of-its-kind pilot that could revolutionise detection of the deadly disease, inviting thousands of men to come for screening using MRI scanners for the first time.

The announcement followed the relaunch of the ‘End needless prostate deaths’ campaign.

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