Prostate Cancer Treatment and Symptoms:
Prostate cancer treatment, symptoms and surgery, enlarged prostate, signs of prostate cancer and cause. News on prostate cancer cure.
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Mar 16th, 2009
Today's news about Don Imus suffering from stage 2 prostate cancer has made many people asking what is stage 2 prostate cancer.
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Mar 16th, 2009
Don Imus, the talk radio host, has gone public with his diagnosed with stage 2 prostate cancer. Imus has not discussed his treatment choices. Most often prostate cancer is treated through surgery or radiation therapy.
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Mar 13th, 2009
Researchers have identified a protein that appears to play a significant role in the growth and migration of prostate cancer cells, especially androgen-independent prostate cancer cells.
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Mar 11th, 2009
A new study shows that men who took more than 1 mg. of folic acid supplements daily had twice the risk of developing prostate cancer. The same risk did not occur from dietary intake of folic acid.
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Feb 17th, 2009
Researchers have determined that a molecule produced by the body's metabolism could be used to differentiate between benign prostate tissue vs. localized and metastatic prostate cancer.
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Feb 16th, 2009
Researchers have identified a panel of small molecules, or metabolites, that appear to indicate aggressive prostate cancer.
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Feb 13th, 2009
New research findings out of Wake Forest University School of Medicine and the University of Wisconsin may help provide some direction for men diagnosed with prostate cancer about whether their cancer is likely to be life-threatening.
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Feb 11th, 2009
A preliminary report of the IMMC38 prostate cancer trial at Sloan Kettering Hospital in New York City confirms that the Cellsearch ™ Circulating Tumor Cell Test (CTC) count can predict whether patients are responding favorably to chemotherapy.
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Feb 8th, 2009
Famed R&B artist Charlie Wilson has announced he is undergoing treatment for prostate cancer. He was diagnosed in September 2008.
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Jan 26th, 2009
The more sexually active a man is in his 20s and 30s, the greater his risk of prostate cancer, suggests a U.K. study that included 400 prostate cancer patients and 409 men without the disease.