Ejaculation frequency, a measure of sexual activity, is not associated with a higher risk for prostate cancer, according to a study in the April 7 issue of The Journal of the American Medical ...
Does more sex mean less prostate cancer risk in men? A large Harvard study suggests men who ejaculate more frequently may have a lower risk of prostate cancer. The research kept track of over 30,000 ...
April 6, 2004 -- High ejaculatory frequency is not associated with an increased risk of prostate cancer and may even be protective, according to the results of a prospective study published in the ...
“For localised prostate cancer, treatment options include surgery or radiotherapy. Both give equivalent cure rates,” Dr Komen ...
A research team from the Department of Surgery and the Department of Medicine, School of Clinical Medicine, LKS Faculty of ...
Overall survival in hormone-resistant prostate cancer patients with different transition of care within the Veterans Affairs (VA) system. This is an ASCO Meeting Abstract from the 2013 ASCO Annual ...
Current prostate specific antigen (PSA) testing "may not effectively target testing to those most likely to benefit, raising concerns about overtesting" warn researchers from the University of Oxford ...
A large study from Europe suggests it doesn’t hurt to wait a few years between prostate cancer screenings — but the research won’t end debate over the value of PSA tests. Millions of U.S. men have ...
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