Health and Me on MSN
The silent burden of prostate cancer: Why men often miss the early warning signs
Symptoms linked to urinary or sexual health often carry an element of embarrassment, making men less likely to discuss them ...
Prostate cancer is one of the most common cancers diagnosed in men. Although it is the second-leading cause of cancer-related deaths for men in the U.S., it is also highly treatable, especially when ...
Prostate cancer is one of the most common types of cancer in males. It starts in the prostate, a small gland about the size of a walnut that is part of the reproductive system. It sits just below the ...
Prostate health is vital for men over fifty as conditions like BPH, prostatitis, and cancer can affect urinary function and ...
Prostate cancer often earns the label “silent killer” because it can develop and progress for years without producing noticeable symptoms. Understanding this timeline becomes crucial for men seeking ...
Persistent cough, unexplained weight loss, fatigue, lumps, and unusual bleeding are among the cancer symptoms men most often ...
A multi-institutional study led by Mayo Clinic and published in Cell Reports Medicine reports that pairing a next-generation immunotherapy with standard hormone therapy before surgery may help ...
Early detection of prostate cancer is crucial, as this disease can be so indolent (slow-growing) that patients don't realize they have it until it causes significant problems. The good news is that if ...
New data with longer-term follow-up suggest that PSA screening probably lowers prostate cancer mortality — but experts stress ...
Prostate cancer affects one in five Australian men, making it the most common cancer in the country. Now, researchers at the Garvan Institute of Medical Research have produced the world's most ...
The statistics are sobering and undeniable — African American men develop prostate cancer at twice the rate of white men and are more likely to die from the disease. This reality makes understanding ...
A new Moffitt Cancer Center study suggests a widely used genomic test can more accurately identify which men with early prostate cancer are at high risk for their disease to come back quickly after ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results