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  2. The Best Foods to Eat for Prostate Health, According to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-foods-eat-prostate-health...

    A lot of men do not seek care when they start to have urinary issues, but that can be the earliest sign of prostate problems,” says Laura Purdy, M.D., a board-certified family medicine physician ...

  3. Management of prostate cancer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Management_of_prostate_cancer

    For men over 64 with prostate cancer limited to the pelvis, using fewer, larger doses of radiation (hypofractionation) results in similar overall survival rates. [28] The risk of dying from prostate cancer or having acute bladder side effects may be similar to that of longer radiation treatment. [ 28 ]

  4. Obestatin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obestatin

    The purpose of producing two hormones with opposing effects is not clear: removing the ghrelin gene from mice did not significantly reduce food intake. No secretory convertase is capable of cleaving the recombinant proghrelin precursor by cleavage at the single basic residue required for generation of the obestatin sequence. [ 7 ]

  5. Benign prostatic hyperplasia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benign_prostatic_hyperplasia

    The prostate gets larger in most men as they get older. For a symptom-free man of 46 years, the risk of developing BPH over the next 30 years is 45%. Incidence rates increase from 3 cases per 1000 man-years at age 45–49 years, to 38 cases per 1000 man-years by the age of 75–79 years.

  6. What you should know to reduce the risk of prostate cancer - AOL

    www.aol.com/prostate-cancer-urologist-explains...

    Lowering the recommended age for baseline PSA testing in Black men could reduce prostate cancer deaths by about 30% without significantly increasing overdiagnosis rates, according to recent findings.

  7. Androgen deprivation therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Androgen_deprivation_therapy

    Men reporting no sexual interest increased from 27.6% to 63.6% after orchiectomy, and from 31.7% to 58.0% after GnRH-A; men who experienced no erections increased from 35.0% to 78.6%; and men who did not report engaging in sexual activity increased from 47.9% to 82.8% after orchiectomy and 45.0% to 80.2%. [14]