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The last thing you want to think about is prostate cancer surgery. With the thought of all the uncomfortable tests and then the surgery itself, which takes organs from your body, scares many people. You never want to think about it or imagine it could happen to you.

There are various symptoms of Mesothelioma cancer, but sometimes they don't appear until 30 to 50 years after exposure to asbestos, hence the importance of following the series of recommendations for prevention of asbestos-related diseases among asbestos workers.

It may come as no surprise that this year, 40,000 women in the United States will lose their lives to breast cancer.

Early detection has always been the No. 1 defense in the fight against breast cancer.

Prostate cancer is the second most common type of cancer found in men (skin cancer is first). The incidence of prostate cancer increases with age, and some people think that all men would eventually have prostate cancer if they lived long enough.

The baby boomer population bubble has now reached 60 years old. This means that many of us are going to need to face illness and diseases that come with surviving six decades. Prostate cancer is one such disease that is expected to grow in number over the next few decades.

It has been a few months now since the re-introductions of Tysabri (natalizumab) back into the U.S. market. The passion with which many MS patients urged the FDA?s panel making the decision was unprecedented. Powerful to the point that, for only the second time in the agency?s history, a drug pulled for safety concerns was allowed for continued use.

In an effort to attempt to lower their risk of breast cancer a disease affecting as many as one in eight American women, it is only natural that women look to natural remedies in an attempt to improve their odds in the fight against this all-too-prevalent kind of cancer.

Because of its nature, prostate cancer is a disease suffered only by men. While this statistic may seem the disease dooms a man to death, the prognosis isn't as bleak as the facts seem to indicate. While one man in six will be diagnosed with prostate cancer, only one of every 34 will actually die as a result of the disease. Depending on how far the cancer has spread and how early it is diagnosed the prognosis for prostate cancer is actually very good.

Prostate cancer can strike men at any age, primarily though, the majority of men tend to be over 65 years old. There are many given theories as to why men get this cancer and theories supporting claims.




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