BPH and enlarged prostate treatment in NJ, led by a urologist.
Weak stream, urgency, frequent urination, incomplete emptying, and waking at night to urinate are not just annoying. They can point to BPH, bladder changes, infection, medication effects, sleep apnea, diabetes, or other causes. Men's Wellness Institute MD gives New Jersey men a discreet, urologist-led starting point for urinary symptoms and enlarged-prostate treatment planning.
Book a visit
Request a telehealth or in-person visit through secure online scheduling, or call the office. No medical details are entered on this website.
Scheduling is handled securely through our affiliated urology practice, Innovative Urology (Domenico Savatta, MD, FACS). You will finish booking on their HIPAA-compliant patient portal.
A real NJ urinary-symptom visit, not a fake local landing page.
Men searching for enlarged prostate treatment, BPH treatment, nocturia treatment, and frequent urination help need more than a generic article. MWI answers that intent honestly: the office is in Perth Amboy, and many New Jersey men may be able to start with telehealth when appropriate.
Perth Amboy office
In-person care is available at 663 Brace Ave in Perth Amboy when an exam, urine testing, bladder-emptying check, cystoscopy discussion, or procedure-level planning is needed.
NJ telehealth when appropriate
Men in Middlesex County, Morris County, Ocean County, Parsippany, Brick, and elsewhere in New Jersey may be able to start the urinary-symptom conversation by secure telehealth when appropriate.
No fake local-office claims
MWI does not claim a physical office in every town. The local care path is honest: Perth Amboy in person, with New Jersey telehealth when the concern fits virtual care.
BPH symptoms are common, but they should still be sorted out.
Men often tolerate urinary symptoms for months because they assume it is normal aging. Sometimes symptoms are mild and watchful waiting is reasonable. Other times, the pattern points to obstruction, poor bladder emptying, infection, medication side effects, sleep apnea, diabetes, or a prostate question that deserves a clearer plan.
The goal is practical: find the driver, reduce disruption, protect bladder function, and decide whether lifestyle changes, medication, further testing, or procedure-level consultation makes sense.
Domenico Savatta, MD, FACS
Board-certified urologist and robotic surgeon
Men's Wellness Institute was founded by Dr. Domenico Savatta, MD, FACS, a board-certified urologist and robotic surgeon. He leads the institute's clinical direction with a focus on men's urologic and whole-person health, evidence-based evaluation, and technology-enabled follow-through.
Enlarged prostate symptoms can show up in different ways.
Waking at night to urinate
Nocturia can be prostate-related, but it can also involve fluid timing, sleep apnea, diabetes, swelling, heart or kidney strain, medications, or bladder storage problems.
Weak or slow stream
A weak stream, hesitancy, straining, dribbling, or stop-start flow can fit an enlarged prostate, but anatomy, medications, infection, stricture, or prior procedures can also matter.
Urgency and frequency
A strong need to go, frequent daytime urination, leakage, or a bladder that feels too active may overlap with BPH or point to another bladder or metabolic driver.
Incomplete emptying
Feeling like the bladder is not empty, needing to return soon after going, recurrent infections, or retention risk can change how quickly a man should be evaluated.
A structured path for BPH, nocturia, and urinary symptoms.
Clarify the symptom pattern
The visit starts with what changed: nighttime urination, daytime frequency, urgency, weak stream, straining, dribbling, leakage, pain, blood, infections, or trouble emptying.
Check the basics that change the plan
A clinician may use a symptom score, medication review, urinalysis, PSA context, diabetes or kidney labs, and a bladder diary when nighttime urination is the main issue.
Measure emptying when needed
Post-void residual testing, urine-flow testing, prostate-size assessment, ultrasound, cystoscopy, or urodynamic testing may be considered when the result would change treatment.
Match the treatment to the cause
Treatment may be watchful waiting, behavior changes, medication, a procedure discussion, or referral for a specific BPH option depending on symptoms, anatomy, safety, and goals.
BPH treatment is matched to symptoms, anatomy, and safety.
The strongest BPH pages explain more than a procedure list. A useful visit decides whether symptoms are mild enough to track, medication makes sense, bladder function needs testing, or a procedure discussion should happen with the right anatomy and expectations.
Watchful waiting and symptom tracking
Mild symptoms may be monitored with a plan for fluid timing, bladder habits, medication review, and follow-up if symptoms become more bothersome or risky.
Behavior and fluid changes
Evening fluids, caffeine, alcohol, diuretic timing, leg swelling, constipation, and sleep quality can all affect urinary frequency and nocturia.
Medication options
A clinician may discuss alpha blockers, 5-alpha reductase inhibitors, tadalafil when ED overlaps, or combination treatment when benefits and side effects fit the patient.
Bladder and infection questions
Not every urinary symptom is prostate obstruction. Urinalysis, culture, bladder-emptying checks, and symptom pattern can help separate BPH from infection or bladder storage problems.
Procedure-level planning
Some men need a discussion of minimally invasive or surgical BPH options. Candidacy can depend on prostate size, anatomy, bladder function, retention risk, goals, and availability.
Prostate screening context
BPH is not prostate cancer, but urinary symptoms often create the right moment to interpret PSA history, prostate size, family history, and screening timing carefully.
If your main issue is waking at night, read the MWI guide to nocturia and BPH. If PSA is part of the concern, see PSA and prostate screening. If cystoscopy has been mentioned, review cystoscopy for urinary symptoms.
When men ask about BPH procedures, the workup has to get specific.
Search demand includes men looking for the latest enlarged-prostate treatment. The honest answer is that there is no single best procedure for every prostate. A urologist has to match the option to anatomy, symptom severity, bladder function, side-effect priorities, recovery expectations, and availability.
Prostate size and anatomy
Options such as prostate lift, water vapor therapy, laser procedures, TURP, waterjet treatment, or other approaches are not interchangeable. Prostate size and channel anatomy matter.
Bladder function and retention risk
A bladder that is not emptying well, very high residual urine, recurrent infections, stones, or retention history can push the workup beyond a simple prescription visit.
Side effects and priorities
Medication dizziness, ejaculation changes, sexual side effects, catheter expectations, durability, recovery time, and anticoagulant use can change which path is reasonable.
When cystoscopy changes the answer
Cystoscopy is not required for every man, but it can help when symptoms are complicated or when a procedure choice depends on the urethra, prostate channel, or bladder findings.
Cancer and PSA context
PSA can be affected by BPH, inflammation, infection, medications, and procedures. A careful plan interprets the PSA question instead of ignoring it or assuming the worst.
No PHI on the public site
Symptoms, medication lists, lab values, photos, insurance cards, and urgent information belong in the secure clinical workflow, not on this public page.
Build the right picture before choosing a treatment.
Nocturia and BPH guide
Why men wake at night to urinate, what causes it, and how a urologist sorts it out.
Why the prostate enlarges with age
The hormone, aging, and anatomy context behind common BPH symptoms.
PSA and prostate screening
How PSA, BPH, inflammation, and family history fit into a careful prostate conversation.
Cystoscopy for urinary symptoms
Why a urologist may inspect the urethra and bladder before selected urinary treatment decisions.
ED treatment in NJ
When urinary symptoms, prostate treatment history, erections, medications, and hormones overlap.
Men's health clinic in NJ
The broader MWI care model for urinary health, sexual health, hormones, weight, and prevention.
BPH treatment in New Jersey, answered.
What kind of doctor treats BPH or an enlarged prostate?
A urologist is the usual specialist for BPH because the symptoms can involve the prostate, bladder, urethra, PSA interpretation, medication side effects, and procedure-level decisions. Men's Wellness Institute MD is led by Dr. Domenico Savatta, MD, FACS, a board-certified urologist.
Do you offer BPH treatment in New Jersey?
Men's Wellness Institute MD can start enlarged-prostate and urinary-symptom evaluation from the Perth Amboy office or by secure New Jersey telehealth when appropriate. The office is at 663 Brace Ave, Perth Amboy, NJ 08861.
Can I start from Parsippany, Brick, or another NJ town?
Often, the first conversation can start by New Jersey telehealth when the concern is appropriate for virtual care. In-person care happens at the Perth Amboy office when an exam, urine testing, bladder-emptying check, cystoscopy discussion, or procedure-level planning is needed. MWI does not claim a physical office in Parsippany or Brick.
Is nighttime urination always BPH?
No. In men, BPH is a common cause of waking at night to urinate, especially after midlife, but nocturia can also involve fluid timing, sleep apnea, diabetes, swelling, heart or kidney conditions, medications, or bladder storage problems. That is why the workup matters.
What treatments are available for BPH?
Treatment may include watchful waiting, behavior and fluid changes, medication, bladder or infection treatment when that is the driver, and selected minimally invasive or surgical BPH options. The right path depends on symptoms, prostate size, bladder emptying, anatomy, side effects, goals, and safety.
Do I need a procedure for BPH?
Not automatically. Many men start with observation, habit changes, or medication. Procedure-level options are considered when symptoms are bothersome, medication is not enough or not tolerated, bladder emptying is unsafe, or anatomy and goals make a procedure reasonable.
Is BPH the same as prostate cancer?
No. BPH means benign prostate enlargement, not prostate cancer. The symptoms can still be a good reason to review PSA history, family history, exam findings, infection or inflammation, and age-appropriate screening with a clinician.
When are urinary symptoms urgent?
Seek urgent care if you cannot urinate, have fever with urinary symptoms, severe pelvic or back pain, heavy bleeding or blood clots, confusion, worsening weakness, or symptoms that feel unsafe.
How much does BPH treatment cost in NJ?
Insurance participation, service availability, and pricing details are confirmed before scheduling. Patients should know what is available, what is covered when possible, and what comes next before care decisions are made.
Can I enter urinary symptoms or lab results on this website?
No. Please do not enter symptoms, medication lists, lab values, urine results, PSA results, insurance cards, photos, or urgent information on this public website. Scheduling and clinical details are handled through the secure patient workflow.
This page is educational and does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. A clinician must evaluate your individual situation.
Book a BPH or urinary-symptom evaluation in Perth Amboy or by NJ telehealth.
Schedule securely through the affiliated urology practice or call the office. Clinical details belong in the secure workflow, not on this public website.
Book a visit
Request a telehealth or in-person visit through secure online scheduling, or call the office. No medical details are entered on this website.
Scheduling is handled securely through our affiliated urology practice, Innovative Urology (Domenico Savatta, MD, FACS). You will finish booking on their HIPAA-compliant patient portal.
