|
All Prostate Disorders Alerts
|
HIFU: Testing a Novel Prostate Cancer Procedure
High-intensity focused ultrasound, or HIFU (pronounced HIGH-foo), is a promising technology for noninvasive tumor ablation that heats cancerous prostate tumors to near-boiling temperatures. Its potential clinical impact is indeed significant. But given the lack of long-term clinical data, Johns Hopkins advises caution.
Image-guided HIFU procedures could permit the ablation of tumors (not only in the prostate, but also in the liver and lung) without the need for surgery or even an incision. This form of
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Clinical Trials Q & A
In this 'Ask the Doctor' column from the Prostate Disorders White Paper, Johns Hopkins Professor Dr. H. Ballentine Carter answers a question that's on the minds of many men diagnosed with early-state prostate cancer: 'Are there any meaningful clinical trials for prostate cancer patients who are not at an advanced stage?'
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Multivitamins and Prostate Cancer
The underlying cause of prostate cancer is unknown. As with other cancers, however, multiple events over a period of many years are probably necessary to produce a cancerous change in a prostate cell. A recent study links overuse of multivitamin supplements with the risk of fatal prostate cancer.
The development of cancer is broadly viewed as a two-step process. The first step is initiation, when the cell is exposed to substances (such as a chemical), agents
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Refining What PSA Levels Mean
In this excerpt from a recent issue of Health After 50, H. Ballentine Carter, M.D., Professor of Medicine at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, discusses current trends in PSA testing.
Since the prostate specific antigen (PSA) test became widely used in the 1990s, prostate cancer deaths have dropped dramatically. Today one of the biggest problems with PSA testing is that it detects many cancers that are not life threatening and would never have been diagnosed or
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Talking with the Pathologist
In this Q and A from the Prostate Bulletin, Dr. Jonathan Epstein, The Reinhard Professor of Urologic Pathology at Johns Hopkins, talks about the intricacies of prostate biopsy.
Q. Is it possible that a 12-core biopsy can miss a prostate cancer?
Dr. Epstein. Most of the time, good sampling of the prostate means taking 10, 12, or 14 or more cores. Even so, there is potentially a high likelihood of biopsy missing cancer. This depends on where
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Understanding the Risk Factors
In this Health Alert from the Prostate Bulletin, Dr. Jacek Mostwin and colleagues discuss five important risk factors for prostate cancer.
Age, race, and family history are important risk factors for prostate cancer. Diet and lifestyle factors may also influence whether a man develops the disease. No clear association has been found between the development of prostate cancer and smoking, vasectomy, the presence of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), or regular alcohol intake (although binge drinking
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Dr. Mostwin Answers Readers Questions
In this Health Alert, Dr. Jacek L. Mostwin, a urological surgeon at Johns Hopkins, answers readers' questions about prostate cancer treatment. The questions come from a recent issue of the Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin. Prostate Cancer Question 1: RADIATION OR SURGERY
Q. Well, I am now officially a member of the 'prostate cancer club.' My doctor called me yesterday with my biopsy results: Gleason 7 and PSA of 6.8 ng/ml. I am 63 years old and will
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Is Watchful Waiting for Prostate Cancer Safe?
Is watchful waiting (close monitoring rather than immediate surgery) for low-grade prostate cancer a safe alternative? New research from the Journal of the National Cancer Institute offers guidance.
Today watchful waiting for prostate cancer is most often recommended for men with low-grade prostate cancer that is believed to be small volume, especially older men whose prostate cancer is unlikely to become life threatening during their remaining years of life.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Two Studies Link Erectile Dysfunction with Cardiovascular Disease
Two Studies Link Erectile Dysfunction with Cardiovascular Disease Erectile Dysfunction Linked to Cardiovascular Disease and Diabetes
A study of nearly 4,000 men with an average age of 57 found that nearly half had experienced erectile dysfunction in the last month or were taking erectile dysfunction drugs. The development of erectile dysfunction was strongly related to the presence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and diabetes, probably because of their negative effects on blood vessel function.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Obesity, Hyperglycemia, and BPH
Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is the most common benign growth process in men. But the cause of this serious condition is not well understood. A recent Hopkins study sheds light on a possible link between enlarged prostate, hyperglycemia, and obesity.
The term hyperplasia refers to an overgrowth of tissue or any abnormal accumulation of cells that causes an organ or area of the body to enlarge. In benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), prostate cells accumulate, and the
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Prostate Cancer in the Family
Is there a history of prostate cancer in your family and if so, what should you do? In this Q & A from an issue of the Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin Dr. Jacek Mostwin gives advice to a reader from California with prostate cancer in the family.
Question. My grandfather died of prostate cancer at 58, and a first cousin on my father's side was also diagnosed with prostate cancer at 66; he sought treatment, and
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Grand Rounds Questions and Answers
Urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction are two major concerns of men facing radical prostatectomy. In this dialogue from a recent issue of our Prostate Bulletin, Johns Hopkins specialists respond to patients questions about these important issues.
Q. One of the major reasons I decided to have surgery for my prostate cancer was that I thought I would be able to maintain my erections after my prostate was removed. I am 72 years old and I went
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
What to Look For in a Prostate Cancer Surgeon
Dr. Patrick Walsh, former director of Hopkins Brady Urological Institute, shares his insights on choosing a doctor for your cancer surgery.
Dr. Patrick Walsh, dean of prostate cancer surgeons, has performed the technically challenging radical prostatectomy procedure thousands of times, and has personally schooled hundreds of surgeons in the finer points of the difficult nerve-sparing cancer operation. He certainly knows what it takes to be an expert in curing a man of cancer, preserving bladder function,
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Using PSA Velocity to Predict Prostate Cancer Risk
Johns Hopkins researchers have found that PSA velocity can predict prostate cancer many years in advance when it is more curable.
PSA velocity is a measurement of how quickly a man's prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level rises from one year to the next. A rapid rise in PSA (a high PSA velocity) suggests the presence of prostate cancer. A study from Johns Hopkins and the National Institute on Aging found that an increase in PSA level
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Calcium: Friend or Foe?
Calcium, a mineral abundant in dairy products, is important for maintaining strong bones and teeth and preventing the bone thinning disease osteoporosis. Studies also suggest that an adequate calcium intake reduces the risks of hypertension and colon cancer.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Fighting Prostate Disease with Phytotherapy
Phytotherapy -- the use of herbs or other plant-based products to prevent or treat a health condition -- is popular among men with prostate problems. In fact, a study reported in Urology found that one third of prostate cancer patients had used some form of alternative or complementary medicine: vitamin or mineral supplements, herbs, antioxidants, or supplements promoted for "prostate health.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Joining a Clinical Trial
Even though all patients want therapies that will keep their cancer in check, it is estimated that only 3% of the possible number of people who would be candidates for clinical trials of novel cancer agents actually enroll in clinical trials. What will help push the science forward at a greater pace is having more men enroll in clinical trials of experimental prostate cancer therapies. More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
A Better Blood Test For Prostate Cancer
This article on EPCA-2 testing for prostate cancer comes from a recent Johns Hopkins Medicine Press Release.
New studies of a blood protein recently identified at Johns Hopkins, early prostate cancer antigen-2 (EPCA-2), may change the way men are screened for prostate cancer -- a disease that kills over 27,000 men every year.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Your PSA Questions Answered
I am 56 years old and just had surgery for my prostate cancer (5.5 ng/ml, Gleason 6). Everything went fine. I amazed my doctor by going surfing less than a month after the surgery. My question, however, has to do with my son, who is now 30 years old. When should he have his first PSA test? More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
PSA Terminology Explained
All men, aged 40 or so, undergo PSA (prostate-specific antigen) testing to screen them for prostate cancer. PSA is an enzyme produced almost exclusively by the glandular cells of the prostate and normally only very small amounts of PSA are present in the blood. High levels of PSA can indicate prostate problems, including BPH and prostate cancer. But high PSA levels can also be caused by a variety of daily activities. Recently, researchers have developed several ways to improve the PSA tests accuracy. More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
News on BPH from Johns Hopkins
Researchers at Johns Hopkins reported finding substantially higher levels of a protein made by a gene known as JM-27 in men whose BPH is more severe and more likely to lead to bladder-related complications if left untreated. The study was published in the February 2007 issue of the Journal of Urology.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Saw Palmetto Losing Ground
Hopkins professor, Dr. H. Ballentine Carter, reviews the data on saw palmetto for BPH symptoms.
Saw palmetto, otherwise known as serenoa repens and sabal serrulata, is an over-the-counter herbal supplement made from the fruit of the American dwarf palm tree. Its manufacturers claim that saw palmetto can ease the urinary symptoms of an enlarged prostate, or benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), faster and with fewer side effects than prescription treatment.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Getting an Accurate Diagnosis for Prostatitis
Effective treatment for prostatitis depends on nailing down the diagnosis.
Prostatitis is a broad term for an infection or inflammation of the prostate. Over the past decade, urologists have identified four types of prostatitis: Acute bacterial prostatitis is a sudden-onset infection that lasts for several days. Chronic bacterial prostatitis is a recurrent infection that can last for weeks, subside, and then flare-up again. Chronic non-bacterial prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CPPS) is diagnosed when no infectious organism can
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
The Inflammation - Prostate Cancer Link
Chronic inflammation may promote the development of prostate cancer.
Inflammation is a sign that the immune system is doing its job in protecting us from infectious agents and injuries. But chronic inflammation has been associated with a wide range of diseases. Today scientists know that inflammatory cells produce free radicalstoxic molecules that can damage cells, especially cellular DNA. This type of DNA damage (also called oxidative damage) can cause genetic alterations (mutations) that lead to the
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Recent Research Spells Good News for Prostate Cancer Patients
Men with early prostate cancer who follow a strict vegetarian diet, exercise regularly, and practice stress reduction techniques may be able to lower their PSA levels and their risk of cancer progression, according to a study from the Journal of Urology. Researchers wanted to test the ability of a very low-fat diet (10% or less of daily calories) to slow or prevent worsening of early prostate cancer. More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Get Your FREE Special Report: 7 Keys to Treating Prostate Cancer
Dear Health Alert Subscriber,
This Johns Hopkins Special Report: 7 Keys to Treating Prostate Cancer, is our gift to you as a registered Health Alert reader, in recognition of Prostate Cancer Awareness Month. We hope youll read it and share it with your loved ones.
The American Cancer Society estimates that 232,000 new cases of prostate cancer will be diagnosed in 2006. 27,000 men will die of the disease. The good news is that prostate cancer is
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
When Watchful Waiting Is the Right Choice for Prostate Cancer
Prostate cancer is considered one of the most treatable cancers detected at an early stage in up to 80% of cases, often slow growing, and typically curable if it is diagnosed before it has spread outside the prostate gland. In fact, some tumors may never become life threatening, even without treatment. Yet because physicians cant tell which prostate cancers will be aggressive and prone to spread, a certain number of men are treated unnecessarily for prostate cancers that might not have posed significant health risks. More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
What's Your Prostate Symptom Score?
Heres an easy way to calculate whether you need treatment for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH).
The International Prostate Symptom Score questionnaire (see below) was developed by the American Urological Association to help men evaluate the severity of their symptoms from benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). This self-administered test can help determine which type of prostate treatment is needed, if any.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
What to Expect from a Prostate Biopsy
If you're facing a prostate biopsy, it's natural to be apprehensive. Here's a realistic guide to this commonly-performed procedure.
An abnormal prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test provides an important clue to your prostate health. But it cannot determine with certainty whether you have prostate cancer. Until more sophisticated tests are developed, a biopsy of the prostate -- though not perfect -- is the best way to find out whether a high PSA level indicates cancer.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
Why Do So Many Men Develop Prostatitis?
Chronic prostatitis usually affects men in their early 40s, and it is one of the leading reasons why men visit a urologist.
Prostatitis is a common condition in which the prostate becomes infected or inflamed, causing severe pain in the perineum -- the area between the rectum and scrotum. Men may also feel pain in their groin, genitals, and lower back. Another possible symptom of prostatitis is an urgent or frequent need to urinate, which can
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
The DRE -- Don't Skip It
Because the prostate gland cannot be seen or felt externally, your doctor will regularly perform a digital rectal examination (DRE) to assess its size, shape, and consistency. A DRE is among the steps necessary to diagnose benign prostatic hyperplasia, or BPH. In tandem with prostate specific antigen (PSA) testing, the DRE exam is also an essential screening tool for prostate cancer.
More...
Read Alert | Read Comment |
|
|
|
 |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|  |
Johns Hopkins' Bestsellers Prostate Disorders Our Featured Titles: The Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin The Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin is a quarterly publication that presents the latest treatment information available on prostate cancer, enlarged prostate (BPH), and prostatitis to help you take charge of your medical care for prostate disease. Each issue is like having an in-depth consultation with a leading specialist. PLUS, subscribe now and get a special discount PLUS 5 FREE Special Reports as INSTANT PDF DOWNLOADS: - Special Report #1: BPH (Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia)
- Special Report #2: Diet and Prostate Health
- Special Report #3: Treating Overactive Bladder
- Special Report #4: Chronic Prostatitis: New Research, Renewed Hope—
- Special Report #5: The Radical Prostatectomy—
Click here to read more or order The Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin.
THE JOHNS HOPKINS PROSTATE LIBRARY A series of cutting-edge publications designed to address your specific prostate questions.
- ChoosingThe Right Treatment For Your Prostate Cancer
You have hundreds of questions about your prostate cancer. America's #1 Urology Center's specialists have the answers.ChoosingThe Right Treatment For Your Prostate Cancer is a detailed, up-to-the-minute treatment guide so you can know all your options before making any irrevocable decisions about your prostate cancer treatment. Read more...- JohnsHopkins Prostate Bulletin: Prostate Cancer Review 2007
Where we've been, where we are, and where we're going in the world of prostate cancer diagnosis and effective prostate cancer treatment. Read more....- JohnsHopkins Prostate Bulletin: The Radical Prostatectomy, by Dr. Patrick Walsh; Rare and Unusual Cancers of theProstate
On the 25th anniversary of his first performing a radical prosatectomy, Dr. Patrick Walsh brings you up to date on what you need to know about this procedure, and how to choose the best surgeon for YOU. Plus, the prostate can be affected by other forms of cancer than prostate cancer. Could your doctor be missing something? Read more...- JohnsHopkins Prostate Bulletin: The Future of Prostate Surgical Technology; The AUA PSA Testing Debate
The latest information on emerging technologies to treat prostate cancer, including robotic radical prostatectomy, and HIFU. Plus, learn more about the ongoing debate concerning the benefits versus drawbacks of PSA Testing for older men, straight from the American Urological Association Conference Debate. Read more...
|  |  | |
|
Medical Disclaimer: The information on this page is not intended to substitute for the advice of a physician.
| Charter Subscription to The Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin PLUS 5 FREE Special Reports, available right now as INSTANT PDF DOWNLOADS |  The Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin brings you up-to-the-minute information about the latest advances in prostate medicine, from the very experts at the forefront of life-saving discoveries in this vital field. From prostate cancer, and prostate surgery and common side effects such as erectile dysfunction and incontinence, to prostatitis, to Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) to Prostate Cancer, The Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin provides the most cuttingedge information for men (and their loved ones!) facing these health challenges. It's like having an in-depth consultation from a specialist from America's #1 medical center. ADDED BONUS: FREE SPECIAL REPORTS! | |
|
| | What you will get with your subscription to The Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin. In every issue of your Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin, you'll receive: Quarterly briefings on the latest medical developmentsLate breaking news of innovative new treatments and essential health study resultsExpert evaluations and comparisons of new medications, surgical techniques, and diagnostic proceduresAuthoritative medical guidance from leading experts around the worldAt least one in-depth Special Report or update on the most important breakthroughs in prostate cancer, BPH, ED, LUTS, or prostatitis.Answers to your most pressing questions about your prostate disorders in the Grand Rounds section ALL delivered direct to you via Priority Mail!As soon as you place your order, you will also receive your five FREE Prostate Disorders Special Reports as INSTANT PDF DOWNLOADS, so you can start using the information you learn right away in your quest for answers about your medical condition and how best to treat it. * Prostate Bulletin Special Report #1: BPH (Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia) * Prostate Bulletin Special Report #2: Diet and Prostate Health * Prostate Bulletin Special Report #3: Treating Overactive Bladder * Prostate Bulletin Special Report #4: Chronic Prostatitis: New Research, Renewed Hope * Prostate Bulletin Special Report #5: The Radical Prostatectomy
Your risk-FREE subscription and 100% money-back guarantee. The Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin is yours to review risk-FREE. If you are not completely satisfied, simply return the Bulletin and receive a refund with no questions asked. Keep the five Prostate Disorders Special Reports just for reviewing the Bulletin. Only by private subscription. Don't bother looking for The Johns Hopkins Prostate Bulletin on the newsstand. It is available only by private subscription, delivered directly to you quarterly via Priority Mail. Why Johns Hopkins? |
|

|
|