Why men with prostate cancer want wider access to prostate specific antigen testing: qualitative study. BMJ 2002; 325(7367): 737.Chapple A, Ziebland S, Shepperd S, Miller R, Herxheimer A, McPherson A. Why men with prostate cancer want wider access to prostate specific antigen testing: ...
Prostate cancer in men does not get to stage four without going through stages one to three. A study must be done of men who, when they were PSA-tested and were found to be at stage four, to see what was happening to their quality of life while the cancer was slowly growing for ...
In Secretary Austin's case, his cancer led doctors to remove his prostate entirely. [Prostate cancer is more common in Black men.] For King Charles, the enlarged prostate will be treated in the hospital this coming week and he should be fine. Two men, two common diagnoses, and two ver...
Why Prostate Cancer Is Picking On Black Men.Investigates the reason Afro-American men have much higher death rates from prostate cancer than any other racial or ethnic group. Two strong suspicions why so many Afro-American men are victims of prostate cancer; Details on a study conducted by the...
Men have far higher cancer risks than women do. While many have thought it was due to risk factors, the real reason may be a biological difference.
Black men die more often of prostate cancer yet, paradoxically, have greater survival benefits from immunotherapy treatment. A new Northwestern Medicine study discovered the reason appears to be an increase of a surprising type of immune cell in the tumor. The findings could lead to immune-based ...
"Not enough men are getting genetic testing to see if they carry a BRCA1 or BRCA2 gene variant that increases their cancer risk," said lead author Heather Cheng, MD, Ph.D., the director of the Fred Hutch Prostate Cancer Genetics Clinic. "And the men who know they are carriers get tes...
Illmensee, K. & Mintz, B. Totipotency and normal differentiation of single teratocarcinoma cells cloned by injection into blastocysts.Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA73, 549–553 (1976). Google Scholar Hochedlinger, K. et al. Reprogramming of a melanoma genome by nuclear transplantation.Genes De...
referred to as 'occult cancer'. We review how normal tissue homeostasis and architecture inhibit progression of cancer and how changes in the microenvironment can shift the balance of these signals to the procancerous state. We also include a discussion of how this information is being tailored ...
For Kim Garretson, that day came four years ago when he was diagnosed with prostate cancer. As often happens when illness strikes men, he reapzed he had nothing to lose, and everything to gain, by letting himself feel. "I’m no longer afraid of expressing almost any emotion," he says...