[From the Support and Resources Page of the National Cancer Institute website] This page offers information such as: How to Find a Doctor or Treatment Facility if You Have Cancer When Someone in Your Family Has Cancer Cancer Support Groups: Questions and Answers National Organizations That Offer Services to People with Cancer and Their Families Clinical Trials and Insurance Coverage - A Resource Guide Financial Assistance for Cancer Care Hospice, Home Care, Health Care Young People with Cancer: A Handbook for Parents You'll find resources here for anyone dealing with cancer or with a loved one who has prostate cancer or any other kind of cancer. There is a wonderfull web site called Malecare which seems to be updated every week with lots of prostate cancer information.
No. Someone having an enlarged prostate does not mean they will develop cancer.
Because cancer isn't contagious.
lung cancer is in the lungs, prostate cancer is in the prostate.
"Some treatment options for someone diagnosed with prostate cancer is to undergo radiation and chemotherapy. Depending at which stage of cancer you are in, this may be your best option."
"Someone takes a PSA test to look for signs of prostate cancer. The PSA can help identify cancer early on, when treatment is most likely effective. It can also be done by a simply available blood test."
The Prostate Cancer Infolink. http://www.comed.com/prostate.
The Prostate Cancer Foundation, the U.S. Army's Prostate Cancer Research Program, the Institute for Prostate Cancer Research, the National Cancer Institute, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention all provide information on the latest research on prostate cancer.
Procedures to treat prostate cancer and chemotherapy, radiation therapy or surgery. Surgery can include removal of cancer from the prostate, or removal of prostate gland.
Prostate Cancer Foundation was created in 1993.
Masterbation does not cause prostate cancer.
Prostate cancer treatments will make you impotent.
PSA is just one indicator of prostate cancer. It is possible to have prostate cancer and have a normal PSA reading.