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prostate cancer | Research | Lifestyle | 8 pages | source: Journal of Urology | Added Dec 09, 2019

Testosterone as a treatment in men who have had prostate cancer, is it a viable option to improve men's health?

This article reviews the use of testosterone treatment in men who have had prostate cancer.  Although not currently used as a treatment method, there is a small amount of evidence which shows that it does not increase the risk of prostate cancer recurrence or progression.

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erectile dysfunction | Research | 10 pages | source: The journal of sexual medicine | Added Dec 08, 2019

Does blood pressure affect erectile dysfunction?

This study looked at how blood pressure (BP) affects erectile dysfunction (ED). The study found that patients with increased BP were more likely to have ED than patients with lower BP.

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prostate cancer | Medivizor | source: Medivizor | Added Dec 07, 2019

CAR T-Cells and HIV: What's the Connection?

It has taken decades of work for researchers to find ways to activate the immune system to treat cancer (what we now call immuno-oncology or I-O). Much of that work has been poorly funded. Largely, it has been the result of researchers getting experience in other disciplines (like infectious disease)
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erectile dysfunction | Research | 10 pages | source: Nature Reviews Urology | Added Dec 06, 2019

Sexual partners and erectile dysfunction

This review investigated the role of sexual partners in managing erectile dysfunction.

The authors concluded that sexual partners are equally affected by erectile dysfunction and can significantly contribute to treatment success.

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erectile dysfunction | Research | Treatment | 10 pages | source: The journal of sexual medicine | Added Dec 04, 2019

Long-term daily administration of udenafil is safe and effective

This study examined the safety and effectiveness of long-term daily administration of udenafil (Zydena) for erectile dysfunction. Researchers reported high effectiveness with a low rate of side effects. 

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prostate cancer | Expertise | 0 pages | source: NutritionFacts.org | Added Dec 03, 2019

Tomato Sauce vs. Prostate Cancer

What happened when cancer patients were given three-quarters of a cup of canned tomato sauce every day for three weeks?

Below is an approximation of this video’s audio content. To see any graphs, charts, graphics, images, and quotes to which Dr. Greger may be referring, watch the above video.

“Occasionally,… positive things happen in the field of cancer prevention science to popular, good-tasting foods.” Yes, broccoli family vegetables are wonderful, but may be “a hard food for the public to swallow.” By contrast, who doesn’t like tomatoes?

But, studies using high-dose supplements of lycopene, the antioxidant red pigment in tomatoes thought to be the active anticancer ingredient, failed over and over again to prevent or treat cancer, and may even end up promoting it—since at the high levels one can get with supplements, lycopene may actually act as a pro-oxidant. But, lycopene in supplement form doesn’t appear to be effective at lower doses, either. “There is a strong [protective] correlation between the intake of [actual whole] fruit[s] and vegetables and the incidence of certain cancers.” But when we supplement with only a single compound isolated in pill form, we may upset the healthy natural balance of antioxidants.

It does seem to be quite the human hubris to think we can reproduce “the beneficial effects of consuming entire fruits and vegetables” by giving supplements of a single phytochemical, which would normally interact with thousands of other compounds in “the natural matrix” Mother Nature intended. In addition to lycopene, other carotenoids in tomatoes include beta-carotene, gamma-carotene, zeta-carotene, phytofluene, and phytoene, all of which are known “to accumulate in human prostate tissue.” And, “there are also numerous non–carotenoid compounds in tomatoes that [may] have [anti-cancer] activity”—not to mention all the compounds we have yet to even characterize.

But, it’s not about finding the one magic bullet: “The anti-cancer effects of carotenoids and other phytonutrients may reside in [their] combined activity.” For example, at the low concentrations of the tomato compounds phytoene, phytofluene, and lycopene found in most people who eat normal amounts of tomatoes, there’s very little effect on cancer cell growth in vitro, used separately. But combine them all together, and a non-effective dose plus a non-effective dose becomes effectivesomehow, significantly suppressing prostate cancer cell growth.

And, the same synergy can be seen across foods. Curcumin, the yellow pigment in turmeric and curry powder, tomato extracts, and the vitamin E found in nuts and seeds do little to inhibit pro-growth signaling of prostate cancer cells—less than 10%. But all three together suppresses growth signaling like 70%. The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

So, how about instead of giving cancer patients lycopene pills, we give them some tomato sauce? “Thirty-two patients with localized prostate [cancer]” were given three-quarters of a cup of canned tomato sauce every day “for 3 weeks…before their scheduled radical prostatectomy.” In their bloodstream, PSA levels dropped “by 17.5%.” PSA, prostate-specific antigen, is a protein produced by prostate gland cells, and elevated blood levels are routinely used “to monitor the success of [cancer] treatment. It was surprising to find that,” in just three weeks, a “tomato sauce-based dietary intervention” could decrease PSA concentrations in men with prostate cancer. Also, free radical damage of the DNA in their white blood cells dropped by 21%. Imagine how antioxidant-poor their diet must have been beforehand, if less than a cup of tomato sauce a day could reduce DNA damage by more than a fifth.

Okay, but what did they find in their prostates? “[H]uman prostate tissue [is thought to] be particularly vulnerable to oxidative DNA damage by free radicals, which are thought to play a critical role in all stages of [cancer formation].” This may be for a number of reasons, including “fewer DNA repair enzymes.” Well, the researchers had tissue samples taken before the tomato sauce from biopsies, and tissue samples after the three weeks of tomato sauce from the surgery, and resected tissues from tomato sauce-supplemented patients had 28% less free radical damage than expected. Here’s the DNA damage in the prostate before the tomato sauce, and here’s after. Just 20 days of sauce. And, what’s interesting is that “[t]here was no association between” the level of lycopene in the prostate and the protective effects. Tomatoes contain a whole bunch of things, some of which may be even more powerful than lycopene.

Regardless, in contrast to the lycopene supplements alone, “the whole-food intervention” seemed to help. To see if lycopene played any role at all, one would have to test a lycopene-free tomato—in other words, a yellow tomato. So, what if you compared red tomatoes to yellow tomatoes, which have all the non-lycopene tomato compounds, to straight lycopene in a pill? So, they fed people red tomato paste, yellow tomato paste, lycopene pills, or placebo pills, and then dripped their blood on prostate cancer cells growing in a petri dish.

Compared to those not eating anything, the red tomato serum, the blood from those who ate red tomato paste, significantly decreased the prostate cancer cell’s expression of a growth-promoting gene called cyclin D1. This downregulation of the gene by the red tomato consumption “may contribute to lower prostate cancer risk by limiting cell proliferation.” The red tomato seemed to work better than the yellow; so, maybe the lycopene helped, but not in pill form. “[T]his gene was not regulated by [the lycopene-pill serum],” indicating that maybe it’s something else. And, lycopene alone significantly upregulated “procarcinogenic genes. Therefore, it can be stated that tomato consumption may be preferable.”

So, what’s the best way? A spouse wrote in to the editor of the Harvard Men’s Health Watch saying his or her husband “wants to have pizza…for his prostate”—to which the doctor replied, fine, but how about “cheese-free pizza (with broccoli instead of pepperoni)”, or, he can just drink some “tomato juice.”

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erectile dysfunction | Research | Treatment | 10 pages | source: Current opinion in urology | Added Dec 02, 2019

Treatment with testosterone improves symptoms of erectile dysfunction and low sex drive

This study looked at the research on testosterone to treat erectile function (ED - inability to achieve and maintain an erect penis) and libido (sex drive) in hypogonadal (small testicles) men. This review found that research supports testosterone therapy to improve ED and low libido in men.

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prostate cancer | Research | 10 pages | source: International journal of urology: official journal of the Japanese Urological Association | Added Nov 30, 2019

Could hormone therapy increase the risk of respiratory infections?

This study investigated a possible relationship between respiratory infections and androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) used to treat prostate cancer.

Researchers concluded that the risk of developing respiratory infections increases with hormonal therapy.

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erectile dysfunction | Research | Treatment | 10 pages | source: The journal of sexual medicine | Added Nov 29, 2019

Evaluating long-term outcomes after penile prosthesis implant

This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of penile implants long-term. This study found that almost half of the patients were still using the device with high satisfaction at 20 years.

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prostate cancer | Research | Treatment | 15 pages | source: Critical reviews in oncology/hematology | Added Nov 28, 2019

Estrogen and sex drive

This review analyzed the role of estrogen therapy in increasing sexual function among prostate cancer patients undergoing androgen deprivation therapy.

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