That among other stuff that is indicating something is off. Went from 1.6 to way over 4 in 12 months. Never had such bad tests in every conceivable area showing something is going on. Uncle died from it. Father was terminal with it but died from a heart attack. Brother had radiation for it and is messed up down there. Been getting signs something is off. Groin pain, hip pain and not being able to pee sitting. Hopefully worrying for nothing. Just three family members with the same cancer is disturbing.
Sorry to hear this. And it is odd to have such drastic changes over such a short time period.
Be careful not to jump to conclusions and submit to the knife or drastic treatments right away.
Re-test. Have them done again. Go to a different lab.
There have been instances where the lab has messed up with the tests. Even gave you someone else's results!
I prefer Quest Labs, not Lab Corp. Maybe you went to Quest already.
Quest has different parameters in testing. Their "normal ranges" are different than Lab Corp. Sometimes much different.
However, they could make an error too so re-test.
Regarding peeing, you might think this odd, but I've been peeing standing up for over a year, into a bottle (2 qt wide mouth plastic juice bottle).
I use one bathroom and my wife uses another so no problem. I keep the bottle in mine. When full, dump and flush, etc.
When I was a kid it was always pee standing up into the toilet. However, that is not sanitary in a home bathroom to do.
I remember being little, standing next to my older brother and crossing streams.
In nature men pee standing up, not sitting.
Much better to do it standing though rather than sitting. May help you.
A side benefit is your water bill will go down. Thousands of gallons down. But that is beside the point.
Hip and groin pain could be caused by other things. You run a lot for example which stretches out the hips and groin. Great for that but might make you sore too.
Article:
Non-cancerous-reasons-your-psa-levels-are-highhttps://www.everydayhealth.com/prostate-cancer/non-cancerous-reasons-your-psa-levels-are-high.aspx