“I was feeling weak and not myself,” says Patrick McLaughlin, a prostate cancer survivor treated at Piedmont Atlanta Hospital. He went to see his primary care physician for a yearly physical exam, which included blood work and a PSA test. “I found out I had prostate cancer through the PSA test,” McLaughlin says. “It’s no different than getting a shot, no pain involved. I tell everyone I meet, ‘If you haven’t had it done, it’s 30 minutes out of your day and it’s your life. You need to look into it.’”
McLaughlin had his blood drawn on a Thursday, and by Tuesday, the lab results had come in. His physician told him he should be concerned with a PSA level above 2.5. His first test results were 8.9, and a follow-up test showed PSA levels above 10. His next step was to undergo a biopsy to determine if he had cancer. McLaughlin’s doctor took 12 samples, and 10 of those came back positive for prostate cancer. “People I had been to said, ‘You need to heal from the biopsy, there’s no rush, relax,’” McLaughlin says. “My physician took one look at my paperwork and said, ‘I can’t have a 46-year-old man with eights across the board walking around. If I had it my way, I would have taken it out of you yesterday.’”
McLaughlin says his stomach dropped when he got the news, but luckily he was able to schedule a surgery for the following Wednesday thanks to a last-minute cancelation. “I had five days to prepare,” he says. “I didn’t have a whole lot of time to think or worry about it. I just knew I didn’t want cancer and I didn’t want to die. In my opinion, my doctor is the best there is. I mean, here I stand now.” His family – including his two sons, who followed in his footsteps and are also mechanics – went with him to his surgery.
Nearly four months after surgery, McLaughlin says he is back at work and can do almost everything he could pre-surgery as an automotive master technician. “I still have to be careful with lifting and some other things, but if I were asked how my state is right now, I’d consider myself 100%,” he says. “It’s phenomenal.” For more information about prostate cancer, visit the Piedmont Cancer Center.
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