Are there any long-term effects patients should be aware of from both surgery and radiation for prostate cancer? Sartor: Yes. With regard to surgery, most of the [side effects] can come relatively early, and then there's a period of healing. Occasionally, there can be problems with urethra...
RAJ LAUNGANI Well, when you talk about complications of prostate cancer, prostate cancer in and of itself does not have complications. When disease is progressed or when it's advanced, you can suffer some of the side effects of advanced disease, like blood in the urine or difficulty with ur...
There are a number of known risk factors for prostate cancer. Learn more about what puts you at risk. Can Coffee Help Prevent Prostate Cancer?Several studies suggest that drinking coffee may lower a man’s odds of getting prostate cancer. What’s the connection? Your Prostate Cancer Surgery ...
Prostate cancer, disease characterized by uncontrolled growth of cells within the prostate gland. Prostate cancer is a frequently diagnosed cancer among males. Learn more about the causes, symptoms, and treatment of prostate cancer.
Lineage plasticity is a hallmark of cancer progression that impacts therapy outcomes, yet the mechanisms mediating this process remain unclear. Here, we introduce a versatile in vivo platform to interrogate neuroendocrine lineage transformation throughou
Cutting out surgery: new advances limit the number of side effects.(Executive Lifestyles: Health: Prostate Cancer)Sears, Diane
Using XBGoost, an interpretable machine learning model, for diagnosing prostate cancer in patients with PSA < 20 ng/ml based on the PSAMR indicator Dengke Li Baoyuan Chang Qunlian Huang ResearchOpen Access09 Jan 2025 Scientific Reports Volume: 15, P: 1532 Impact of Obesity on Perioperati...
PSA can be elevated secondary to prostate cancer. However, the PSA can become raised with several other conditions*, including BPH, prostatitis, UTI, recent urological surgery, or urinary retention, reducing its specificity. *Whilst a DRE can raise the PSA, this is thought to be <0.3ng/mL ...
The ability to define clinically insignificant prostate cancer in a patient with a relatively short life expectancy could help avoid unnecessary surgery, radiation therapy, or other treatments, and, until now has not been possible. In a study recently published in the Journal of the American Medic...
The largest single-institution study of its kind has found few complications in prostate cancer patients treated with radiotherapy after surgery to remove the prostate. Men in this study received radiotherapy after a prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test