Disso Eleginoides Posted December 15, 2021 Share Posted December 15, 2021 51 minutes ago, Zeiexss said: Does enlarge prostate equate to prostate cancer usually? Not at all. This is more likely to be due to a condition called benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) than prostate cancer. By the age of 50, about 1 in 7 men will experience prostate cancer while 1 in 2 men will experience BPH. To answer a related question, BPH does NOT increase your risk for prostate cancer. You should visit a doctor, preferably a urologist, to be sure. Quote Link to comment
Amatz2amazing Posted April 16, 2022 Share Posted April 16, 2022 If you have a history of Prostate cancer in the family - father, uncle, grandfather - you should get a serum PSA test and uro consult at the age of 40. If you don't have a history, do it at the age of 50. If one family member is diagnosed with Prostate CA, u should know that at least one per generation or one every 2 generations may develop the same CA. If prostate CA is diagnosed in a male relative, you should know that a female relative may develop breast CA because the two CAs are interrelated. Quote Link to comment
j101 Posted June 26, 2023 Share Posted June 26, 2023 On 4/16/2022 at 5:27 PM, Amatz2amazing said: If you have a history of Prostate cancer in the family - father, uncle, grandfather - you should get a serum PSA test and uro consult at the age of 40. If you don't have a history, do it at the age of 50. If one family member is diagnosed with Prostate CA, u should know that at least one per generation or one every 2 generations may develop the same CA. If prostate CA is diagnosed in a male relative, you should know that a female relative may develop breast CA because the two CAs are interrelated. Thanks Quote Link to comment
Tanya of Tokyo Posted October 3, 2023 Share Posted October 3, 2023 On 4/16/2022 at 5:27 PM, Amatz2amazing said: If you have a history of Prostate cancer in the family - father, uncle, grandfather - you should get a serum PSA test and uro consult at the age of 40. If you don't have a history, do it at the age of 50. If one family member is diagnosed with Prostate CA, u should know that at least one per generation or one every 2 generations may develop the same CA. If prostate CA is diagnosed in a male relative, you should know that a female relative may develop breast CA because the two CAs are interrelated. On 12/15/2021 at 10:32 AM, Disso Eleginoides said: Not at all. This is more likely to be due to a condition called benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) than prostate cancer. By the age of 50, about 1 in 7 men will experience prostate cancer while 1 in 2 men will experience BPH. To answer a related question, BPH does NOT increase your risk for prostate cancer. You should visit a doctor, preferably a urologist, to be sure. hello baka my m refer kayo na gyne onco🌨 Quote Link to comment
Maykeee Posted May 7 Share Posted May 7 Always remember that SUGAR is always a great food to cancer cells... Wishing all of you of a cancer-free body and family... Quote Link to comment
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.