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         Prostate Cancer:     more books (100)
  1. Love, Sex and PSA - Living and Loving with Prostate Cancer by Robert Mitchcox, 1997-10-01
  2. Third Opinion on Prostate Cancer by Jessie Wright, 2010-09-07
  3. Intimacy With Impotence: The Couple's Guide To Better Sex After Prostate Disease by Ralph Alterowitz, Barbara Alterowitz, 2004-05-28
  4. Contemporary Issues in Prostate Cancer: A Nursing Perspective, Second Edition by Jeanne Held-Warmkessel, 2005-12-12
  5. Prostate Cancer: Understand, Prevent and Overcome by Professor Jane Plant, 2005-07-07
  6. The Lovin' Ain't Over: The Couple's Guide to Better Sex After Prostate Disease by Ralph Alterowitz, Barbara Alterowitz, 1999-10
  7. Management of Prostate Cancer (Current Clinical Urology)
  8. Mayo Clinic On Prostate Health: Answers from the World-Renowned Mayo Clinic on Prostate Inflammation, Enlargement,Cancer (Mayo Clinic on Health)
  9. Prostate Cancer: Nursing Assessment, Management, and Care
  10. What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About(TM) Prostate Cancer: The Breakthrough Information and Treatments That Can Help Save Your Life (What Your Doctor May Not Tell You About...) by Glenn J. Bubley, Winifred Conkling, 2005-01-01
  11. Drug Management of Prostate Cancer
  12. Dynamic Contrast-Enhanced MRI Atlas of Prostate Cancer by Robert L. Bard, 2008-11-24
  13. Cognitive-Behavioral Stress Management for Prostate Cancer Recovery Facilitator Guide (Treatments That Work) by Frank J. Penedo, Michael H. Antoni, et all 2008-03-24
  14. The Decision: Your prostate biopsy shows cancer. Now what?: Medical insight, personal stories, and humor by a urologist who has been where you are now. (Volume 1) by John C. McHugh M.D., 2010-02-07

41. CNN - Study: Mineral Selenium Cuts Risk Of Prostate Cancer - August 22, 1998
CNN.com
http://www.cnn.com/HEALTH/9808/22/prostate.mineral/

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Study: Mineral selenium cuts risk of prostate cancer
August 22, 1998
Web posted at: 8:58 a.m. EDT (1258 GMT) From CNN Health Correspondent Elizabeth Cohen ATLANTA (CNN) Some 40,000 men die every year from prostate cancer, but a new study says what a man eats may help prevent the disease. The study, published by the National Cancer Institute, found men who had the highest intakes of the mineral selenium cut their cancer rates by one-half to two-thirds compared to men with the lowest intakes of selenium. "The notion that vitamins and minerals might prevent prostate cancer is a particularly exciting thing," said Dr. Philip Taylor of the National Cancer Institute. Selenium is found in fish, meats, grains and seeds in varying amounts. But it is also available in supplements. Researchers have found that taking 200 micrograms a day cuts the risk of getting prostate cancer.

42. Meat: The Recipe For Prostate Cancer
Information about the link between eating meat and prostate cancer.
http://britishmeat.com/prostate.htm
MEAT
The Recipe For Prostate Cancer
In the West, prostate cancer is the second largest killer of men after lung cancer. A international study recently conducted by researchers at the University of Massachusetts Medical School showed that men who eat the most meat and dairy products run the greatest risk of dying from the disease. Published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute (1998), the report confirmed that men who eat plenty of grains and nuts are the least likely to die from prostate cancer. The study was based on a survey of cancer deaths in 59 countries. It corroborated the results of earlier investigations into the role of a meat-based diet in cardiovascular disease and cancer. A higher intake of cereals, nuts and oil seeds, on the other hand, has a protective effect. Thus the plant-based diets found in many less-advanced societies are the healthiest - as long as people get enough to eat. "For prostate cancer and cancers of other sites that are sensitive to serum (blood) hormone levels, animal fat may influence the risk for cancer by raising adult's sex hormone levels", the report notes. The third-biggest cancer killer in the United States is colon cancer - another thoroughly nasty disease. Colon cancer, too, has been strongly linked with a diet high in animal fat and low in fruits, vegetables and whole-grain products.

43. Prostate Cancer Dot Com
of this site is to provide relief, encouragement and support to patients and theirloved ones who are confronted with the diagnosis of Cancer of the Prostate.
http://www.prostatecancer.com/
The purpose of this site is to provide relief, encouragement and support to patients and their loved ones who are confronted with the diagnosis of Cancer of the Prostate. This site comes to help those who face tough decisions in a confusing and conflicting medical environment. My belief is that the patient has the ultimate right and responsibility to make his own personal decisions utilizing his physicians as coaches only. It is the patient who must weigh quality of life versus length of survival issues. Knowledge is the best medicine, but only when it is applied with Wisdom and Understanding by the individual. The variety of services provided on this site are aimed at fulfilling these goals. Israel Barken, M.D.

44. :: RCOG ::
Information about the disease including over 70 FAQs. Includes resources as well as specific information Category Health Conditions and Diseases Genitourinary Prostate......Extensive prostate cancer treatment information including prostate cancer treatmentoptions, prostate cancer diagnosis, cancer research, cancer information.
http://www.prostrcision.com/
According to the American Cancer Society, this year alone almost 200,000 men in the United States will be newly diagnosed with prostate cancer and 40,000 men will die from this disease. If these statistics are sobering, imagine the fright at actually hearing a diagnosis of prostate cancer. Often accompanying that fear comes a sense of helplessness, of being out-of-control because men are suddenly confronted with something totally unknown. When men listen to their doctors, look on the Internet, read books or speak to friends, the situation only worsens as they learn that much of the information available about prostate cancer, especially about treatment, is conflicting and frequently inaccurate. Doctors often disagree on which treatment they believe is the most effective for prostate cancer. Typically, if you go to a urologist, that doctor will recommend a radical prostatectomy. And, if you see a radiation oncologist, that doctor will recommend some type of radiotherapy. Because of this confusion, men with prostate cancer, plus their families, need to be part of the decision-making process for treatment of this disease. In fact, the choice of treatment is one of the most important decisions a man will make during his lifetime. This web site is written to educate men and their families about prostate cancer, how it works and how to evaluate the various methods of treatment. Readers will quickly learn that cure of prostate cancer is dependent on three things: Finding prostate cancer early with a PSA test. Selecting a treatment method with a proven high cure rate. Selecting a doctor who knows how to cure prostate cancer. Readers will also learn about a very important subject never discussed by doctors: that most doctors performing seed implants are not adequately trained and should not be treating prostate cancer! Before producing this web site, we asked ourselves, "If I had prostate cancer, was not a doctor, and knew nothing about this disease, what would I want to know?" We determined we would want to: Learn about this disease, about the various treatments and, especially, about the cure rates and how they were calculated; Know how to access the medical journal references so that we could review them if we desired; Know about my doctor’s level of training and especially what his/her particular cure rates are; and Have all the cards put on the table without any hype. That is how this web site has been written. It is important to educate yourself about prostate cancer. It is also important that you are not afraid to ask hard questions of the doctors who are going to treat you. If seed implantation is discussed, ask your physician about his/her level of training and cure rates. Ask, "did you have a two-day training course?" Ask, "using PSA nadir 0.2 ng/ml, what is the cure rate of your patients who did not have hormones?" After all, if you were the manager of the Atlanta Braves or some other favorite baseball team, to evaluate a player, you would look at a baseball player’s batting average. Cure rates, calculated by PSA nadir 0.2 ng/ml, are the "batting averages" for doctors treating prostate cancer. This is not the time to be reluctant to ask for information. It is your life and the quality of that life that is at stake. Special Notes: This page contains extensive additional information on prostate cancer research and treatment not found in our brochure. You are invited to explore all the areas on this site, including the Integrated Prostate Health Program, Frequently Asked Questions, Biopsy Info and Travel pages. We have also included a recent review of the prostate cancer field by a noted investment analyst, Mr. William Baker. Please take the time to read this report Click here to read the GARP Monitor Report. Two press releases have been added to our web site Click here to read the latest news. We regularly update the material; the last update was June 25, 2002. On each section, please click the "refresh" button on your browser menu to download changed material. In December, 1998 our report detailing the largest series of men treated with brachytherapy in the modern literature was published in The Cancer Journal. Entitled "Simultaneous Radiotherapy for Prostate Cancer: I-125 Prostate Implant Followed by External-Beam Radiation" ,this landmark article covers 1,020 patients with follow-up to 14 years. We have updated our findings on PSA nadir and have discovered that in order for men to be potentially cured of prostate cancer, they must achieve and maintian a PSA nadir of 0.2 ng/ml, the identical PSA nadir level used in most radical prostatectomy studies. Our most recent two articles detail these findings about PSA nadir. Click here to receive a copy of these reports. Please note that based on extensive analysis, we have now changed our PSA nadir requirements to 0.2 ng/ml. Information on these pages is in the process of revision to update results to the new standard. To read summaries of these articles, click on an article title to the left. Additionally, Dr. James Lewis, Director of the Education Center for Prostate Cancer Patients (ECPCP) in New York and author of The New Guidelines for Prostate Cancer Treatment, has just published his latest book, entitled The Best Treatment Options for Prostate Cancer. This is an excellent reference text for men with prostate cancer who are seeking options for treatment. Call Dr. Lewis' office at 516-942-5000 if you would like to purchase a copy of the book. Another resource for prostate cancer is a new book from Thomas A. Farrington entitled "Battling the Killer Within". It contains a look at prostate cancer through the eyes of a prostate cancer survivor. To find out more about this informative book or purchase a copy, please go to the web site located at http://www.battlingthekillerwithin.com. The information contained in this web site is based on our experience in treating more than 3,000 men with prostate cancer over the past 20 years. This web site is also based upon research findings, both ours and other investigators, which have been published in scientific, peer-reviewed medical journals as referenced on page 34. For additional information, see questions 90 and 91 on pages 32 and 33. And, if you have any further questions, contact us, and we will send you a video about prostate cancer and Radiotherapy Clinics of Georgia. If you have any questions or need further information after reading this web site, please contact us. We also have a video about Radiotherapy Clinics of Georgia and will be glad to send a copy to you. In Atlanta, Georgia, our phone number is 404-320-1550. Or if you are calling long distance, our phone number is 800-952-7687. Please read our privacy statement by clicking here. © 2002 Radiotherapy Clinics of Georgia Frank A. Critz, M.D. Medical Director Georgia Center for Prostate Cancer Research and Treatment This web site was prepared to help you understand the specifics of prostate cancer and its treatments. We begin with the basics and end with an extensive Question and Answer section. After learning the facts about prostate cancer, the patients profiled in this web site chose the ProstRcision® treatment offered by the only Center of Excellence for Radiotherapy of Prostate Cancer in the Southeast – Radiotherapy Clinics of Georgia (RCOG). These and other patients welcome the opportunity to share their stories with you. The Normal Prostate The normal prostate gland, which on average is about the size of an egg, is located in a man’s pelvis, sandwiched between the bladder, above the gland, and the rectum, below the gland. The prostate gland consists of millions of prostate cells, which are surrounded by a thin covering called the capsule, much like the shell of an egg. Lying against the prostate, on both the right and left sides, are sex nerves; and running through the middle of the gland is the urethra, the tube that goes from the bladder out a man’s penis for urination. The prostate produces semen, the material ejaculated at sexual orgasm. How Prostate Cancer Works Prostate cancer begins when, for reasons no one fully understands, one or more normal cells inside the prostate transform into cancer cells. In general, prostate cancer then enters the first of three phases of growth: Phase 1: Growth inside the prostate contained by the capsule. For a time, the transformed prostate cancer cells multiply and grow inside the prostate with growth contained by the prostate capsule. Phase 2: Penetration of the capsule and growth into the surrounding normal organs. In the second phase, cancer cells penetrate through the prostate capsule and extend into surrounding normal organs including the rectum, sex nerves, bladder, and into the muscles that control urination. These "microscopic capsule penetration" cancer cells continue to multiply. Phase 3: Spread, called metastases, by lymph and blood vessels to other parts of a man’s body. In the third and final phase of prostate cancer, microscopic capsule penetration cancer cells, or cancer cells inside the prostate, invade lymph or blood vessels. Using lymph and blood vessels as a highway, prostate cancer cells spread throughout a man’s body. Initially metastases usually go to lymph nodes and bones and later to lung, liver and other parts of the body. Finding prostate cancer early with the PSA and the Percent Free PSA test A simple blood test to see if a man has prostate cancer can be performed on a small amount of blood drawn in a doctor’s office or laboratory. This test, called prostate-specific antigen or PSA, measures the amount of a large protein in the body that is produced only by prostate cells. Since no other cell in the body makes this protein, the PSA test measures the amount of PSA produced by normal prostate cells and any additional PSA produced by prostate cancer cells. A normal sized prostate in a man without cancer produces an average 1.1 ng/ml of PSA. As men age, their prostate glands often enlarge, producing more PSA, so PSA measurements up to 4.0 ng/ml are considered in the normal range. A massively enlarged prostate or a prostate gland inflamed by prostatitis can produce even greater amounts of PSA. (Note: ng/ml means the amount of PSA in a milliliter of serum.) Because prostate cancer cells typically produce more PSA than normal cells do, a PSA reading above 4.0 ng/ml signals the need for further testing. However, in men with normal sized prostates, a PSA reading above 2.0 ng/ml should raise concerns for prostate cancer. The percent free (or PSA II) test is very helpful for men with a PSA less than 10.0 ng/ml. Percent free PSA readings of 25% or less in men with PSA 4.1-10.0 ng/ml or 15% with PSA of 2.5-4.0 ng/ml indicates possible prostate cancer. The American Cancer Society recommends that, starting at age 50, men have a PSA test each year. However, sons and brothers of prostate cancer patients, as well as all African-American men, should begin their PSA tests at age 40. In addition to the PSA test, it is recommended that men periodically have examinations of the prostate called a digital rectal examination (DRE). This is because some prostate cancers, frequently the more aggressive types, do not produce very much PSA and a lump in the prostate could be found with a DRE. The Big Three: PSA, Gleason Score and Clinical Stage If an abnormal PSA is discovered, or if a doctor finds a lump in the prostate during the DRE, that patient should be evaluated for prostate cancer. Typically, the patient is referred to a urologist for prostate biopsy consideration. A biopsy is a 10-minute outpatient procedure that can be performed in any urologist’s office. While observing the prostate with an ultrasound machine, the urologist inserts thin, hollow needles through the rectum into the patient’s prostate and removes a tiny amount of prostate cells. The biopsy material is then sent to a pathologist who studies these prostate cells under a microscope to determine if cancer is present. The best of the biopsy techniques is the sextant biopsy. During a sextant biopsy, the urologist performs six needle ‘sticks’, taking samples from the top, middle and bottom of the right and left sides of the prostate. Each needle stick is then placed in a separate container. This enables doctors to map out where any cancer is located. If prostate cancer is discovered, three major factors are evaluated: 1. PSA amount, which indicates how much cancer is present. 2. Gleason Score, which indicates how fast the cancer is growing. 3. Clinical Stage, which indicates where the cancer is located. PSA amount: Of the "big three," the amount of PSA is the most important. Why? Because it is the best measure of how much cancer a man has in his body. Based upon PSA levels, men are classified into one of four PSA groups: Table 1. PSA Groups 0.0-4.0 ng/ml 4.1-10.0 ng/ml 10.1-20.0 ng/ml 20.1 ng/ml or more

45. Prostate Cancer: A Journey Of Hope Homepage
prostate cancer A Journey of Hope exploits the disease that has infected over 179000men each year and reveals the nature of the disease as well as possible
http://www.pbs.org/ketc/prostatecancer/
In recent years, the incidence of prostate cancer in the United States has exploded. Current data from the American Cancer Society predicts nearly 179,300 new cases of the disease will be diagnosed in 1999, with 37,000 men succumbing to the illness. These sobering statistics tell only a small part of prostate cancer's growing and frightening reach into the American family. Prostate Cancer: A Journey of Hope addresses these statistics through the stories of those who are dealing with this terrible disease.
send feedback to: mbuckley@ninenet.com Prostate Cancer: A Journey of Hope is made possible by a generous grant from the Sage Foundation in memory of George M. Parker and every man who fought the disease and never gave up.
Development of outreach projects with public television stations nationwide is funded by the Prostate Cancer initiative, a joint effort between the Cancer Research Institute and the American Cancer Society

46. Prostate Cancer Links - Building Opportunities For Self-Sufficiency
Extensive collection of related links.
http://www.cancerlinks.org/prostate.html

Cancerlinks.org Index
Dedicated to the memory of Zenas Ball Andrews, lost to us all too soon. Welcome to Prostate Cancer Links
Our Website is specially designed to make searching the World Wide Web for information about prostate cancer faster and easier. The Cancer Links Web Tutorial aims to make using the Internet easier. There is also a Spanish language version available. Como Buscar al Web. Cancerlinks is committed to Web Site Accessibility . We took every effort in writing code for this website to ensure the visually impaired, will feel welcome here. Print any page by clicking on the print button of your browser. Print out a printer-friendly version. Table Of Contents:
Prostate Cancer Peace and Light!! Alexandra Andrews INVESTIGATE LINKS OF SPECIAL INTEREST Prostate Cancer General Medical Information General Medical Information Advocacy, Finance and Legislation Air Flights For Cancer Patients ... Survivors Of Cancer PROSTATE CANCER GENERAL MEDICAL INFORMATION
Back to Table Of Contents
American Prostate Society
http://www.ameripros.org/

47. Patient Resources Prostate Cancer

http://www.pslgroup.com/PROSTCANCER.HTM

48. Riverside Urology
Specializes in the treatment of prostate disease and prostate cancer bladder cancer, urinary incontinence, male impotence and kidney stone disease. Located in Columbus, Ohio.
http://www.2rui.com/

49. CDC | Prostate Cancer | About The Program | Program Fact Sheet 2002
Public health and prevention perspectives along with general information are provided by the US Category Health Conditions and Diseases Genitourinary Prostate......2002 Program Fact Sheet. prostate cancer The Public Health Perspective. Men’shormonal characteristics. Top of Page. How Is prostate cancer Detected?
http://www.cdc.gov/cancer/prostate/prostate.htm
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Cancer Home
About Us Events En Español ... Contact Us Prostate Cancer Contents Home About the Program What's New Resource Materials ... Visitor Survey Topic Areas Breast/ Cervical Cancer Cancer Registries/ Surveillance Colorectal Cancer Comprehensive Cancer Control ... Skin Cancer

2002 Program Fact Sheet
Prostate Cancer:
The Public Health Perspective
You may also download a PDF version (110K) for Adobe Acrobat Reader Contents “When medical experts don’t have the answers, the only right decision is what’s right for the patient.” Dr. David Kessler, MD, JD, Dean,
Yale School of Medicine
A Public Health Concern
Prostate cancer is the most common form of cancer, other than skin cancer, among men in the United States and is second only to lung cancer as a cause of cancer-related death among men. The American Cancer Society estimates that 189,000 new cases of prostate cancer will be diagnosed and that approximately 30,200 men will die of the disease in 2002. Top of Page
The Facts
  • About 80% of all diagnosed prostate cancers are in men aged 65 years of age or older.

50. Prostate Cancer News From Prostate Cancer Week - Your Online Prostate Cancer New
News source which is updated daily; small subscription fee.Category Health Conditions and Diseases Genitourinary Prostate......prostate cancer Week Latest news about prostate cancer and awareness. Preview-ProstateCancer Week of March 23, 2003 / Vol. 3 No. 12.
http://www.prostatecancerweek.org/
"The Best Way to Keep Up on Breakthroughs and Advances" Preview-Prostate Cancer Week of April 13, 2003 / Vol. 3 No. 15 News will be aired here as we get it while it's "news" Study: Skin Patch May Help Men With Advanced Prostate Cancer
Study: A Brother With Prostate Cancer Triples a Man's Risk
Current Issue for Week of April 6, 2003/ Vol. 3 No. 14 ... Prostate Cancer Week Archives Previous Issues Available For More Information, Please See "About This Site," or contact us at: info@prostatecancerweek.org Last Updated: We subscribe to the HONcode principles of the HON Foundation. Medical Week, LLC

51. HOW WE CURED MY PROSTATE CANCER
Describes an alternative approach, without surgery, radiation or chemotherapy or side effects.
http://hometown.aol.com/daju211/
htmlAdWH('7003021', '120', '30'); htmlAdWH('7001998', '234', '60'); Main Create Edit Help
HOW WE CURED MY PROSTATE CANCER
No Surgery-No Radiation-No Chemotherapy
After you read this homepage about our experience and how we cured me of prostate cancer, let me share my experience with you personally.
Before you purchase this book I would like to answer any questions that you might have about the contents of the book and my experience.
In an effort to broaden our sharing of this information with others we are reinvesting a portion of our profits from book sales in personal telephone calls at our expense to everyone who request that we call them.
In order to receive a call from me, please send us an e-mail to - daju211@aol.com - with your telephone number and the best time to give you a call so that I can answer any questions that you might have.
We have an ever present backlog of calls and as such we return calls in the order that they are received. We ask that you be patient as you await our call, it should not be longer than 72 hours. I look forward to talking with you.
We would also like to suggest that you visit our World Wide Website where we have been able to develop for you the reader a much more extensive range of information.

52. CDC | Prostate Cancer Control Initiatives
The Center for Disease Control has made it a priority in the education of men concerning prostate Category Health Men s Health Conditions and Diseases Prostate...... David Satcher, MD, PhD, Director Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 1993–1998.prostate cancer Screening A Decision Guide. prostate cancer Awareness.
http://www.cdc.gov/cancer/prostate/
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Cancer Home
About Us Events En Español ... Contact Us Prostate Cancer Contents Home About the Program What's New Resource Materials ... Visitor Survey Topic Areas Breast/ Cervical Cancer Cancer Registries/ Surveillance Colorectal Cancer Comprehensive Cancer Control ... 2003 Cancer Conference Web Site Prostate Cancer Conference Report: Future Directions for Public Health Practice and Research in Prostate Cancer "It is important that we move toward the development of health messages that reflect the best medical knowledge available to date on prostate cancer to meet the information needs of primary care clinicians and of the public." David Satcher, MD, PhD, Director
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Prostate Cancer Screening: A Decision Guide
Are you thinking about getting screened for prostate cancer or do you know someone who is? Prostate Cancer Screening: A Decision Guide is designed to help a man decide whether screening is right for him. The 17-page guide discusses the prostate, prostate cancer, and the screening tests in an easy-to-read question and answer format.

53. The Paget Foundation - For Paget's Disease Of Bone And Related Disorders
Information and programs for patients and medical professionals on Paget's disease of bone, primary hyperparathyroidism, fibrous dysplasia, osteopetrosis, breast cancer metastatic to bone, and prostate cancer metastatic to bone.
http://www.paget.org
This website includes information for patients and health
professionals on the following bone diseases and conditions:
Paget's disease of bone, primary hyperparathyroidism, fibrous dysplasia, osteopetrosis (not osteoporosis) and the complications of some cancers to the bones. This website does not include information on Paget's breast disease.

Please Select a Link Below
(Select "Patients Needed for Research Studies" under patients section)
A Brief Overview
The Paget Foundation, founded in 1978, is a national voluntary health agency located in New York, NY. It is named for Sir James Paget, the eminent British surgeon who first identified Paget's disease of bone. Dr. Paget also discovered other diseases including Paget's disease of the breast and Paget's disease of the vulva. The Paget Foundation does not provide information on the breast and vulva diseases. The foundation provides information for patients, the general public and health professionals, and supports and advocates for increased research on all bone diseases.
Physician Referral
Physician referral lists are available for Paget's disease, primary hyperparathyroidism, fibrous dysplasia and osteopetrosis.

54. WebRing: Hub
Websites that deal with Gay Men's Health issues including HIV/AIDS, smoking, substance use, prostate cancer, hepatitis, and gay men's body image issues.
http://v.webring.com/hub?ring=gayhealth

55. CPCN
Canadian association of prostate cancer support groups, Over 100 prostate cancersupport groups, Only complete listing of Canadian prostate cancer support
http://www.cpcn.org/
The Canadian Prostate Cancer Network a charitable organization, registration number 88716 1859 RR0001, is the national association of prostate cancer support groups, active in creating and maintaining these groups and in promoting early detection testing as the only cure, presently, for prostate cancer.
P.O. Box 1253
Lakefield, ON
Phn: (705) 652-9200
Fax: (705) 652-0663
Toll Free
1-866-810-CPCN
cpcn@nexicom.net

Click to Enlarge

Learn more about CPCN's National Awareness Campaign
If you have seen this poster and want more information on early detection of prostate cancer click here . This poster will be appearing on over 400 outdoor signs from Newfoundland to BC starting in January. Help us make this, the first nation-wide prostate cancer awareness campaign, a success. FRANCAIS Living Proof brochures help to complete the picture A brochure with 5 different "faces" has been produced to compliment the outdoor transit posters now in evidence all across the nation. For the full story, click here Ontario Group Formed to Promote PSA Tests Working with Dr. John Trachtenberg, Toronto's John Peck has formed a group called Early Prostate Cancer Diagnosis Ontario, or EPCDO for short. The group's goals are to tell people about the value of early diagnosis through the PSA blood test (combined with DREs, of course), and to try to get OHIP to cover the cost of these tests when carried out in a doctor's office or at a testing lab.

56. Prostate Cancer, The Cancer Information Network
General information for patients, family members and caregivers.
http://www.cancerlinksusa.com/prostate/index.htm
Thank You For Visiting Our Sponsors! Support Top 10 Prevention ... Message Board
First Steps After Diagnosis of Cancer
Top 10 Cancer Sites, Treatment Centers, and Cancer Books for Newly Diagnosed Patients. Cancer Patients: Know Your Rights. Understanding Prognosis and Cancer Statistics - answers the most important question, "What is my prognosis?" Find a Cancer Treatment Center ... Pediatric Cancers
Welcome to The Cancer Information Network Introduction
The diagnosis of prostate cancer brings with them many questions and a need for clear, understandable answers. We hope this website will help. It provides information and useful internet links about the malignancy of the prostate...
In The Spotlight: Prostate Cancer Education Council Adds a New Test for Screening Prostate Cancer During Prostate Cancer Awareness Week (PCAW) -
Research found that the use of the cPSA test results in fewer false positive diagnoses of prostate cancer than commercially available tPSA and reduces the number of biopsies necessary to detect the disease by 44,000 each year in the United States.
Questions about cancer or its treatment?

57. Prostate Cancer Resource Network
Reaching Out To Patients And Their Families. A Taxexempt Charitable Foundation.The Mission of the Network. The Activities of the Network. How You Can Help.
http://pcrn.org/
Reaching Out
To Patients
And Their Families
A Tax-exempt Charitable Foundation
The Mission of the Network
The Activities of the Network
How You Can Help
Who to Call ...
Other Web Sites
For Information call 1-800-915-1001
P.O. Box 966, New Port Richey, FL 34656
(727) 847-1619 * Fax: (727) 842-9841
Ordering Information: 1-800-580-6866 This site has been accessed times since July 3 1997

58. PCAW - Prostate Cancer Awareness Week Homepage
prostate cancer Education Council 5299 DTC Blvd., Suite 345 Denver, CO 802111303316-4685 • 866-477-6788 • 303-320-3835 (fax) webmaster@pcaw.com,
http://www.pcaw.com/
Select a State AB - Alberta AK - Alaska AL - Alabama AR - Arkansas AZ - Arizona BC - British Columbia CA - California CO - Colorado CT - Connecticut DC - District of Columbia DE - Deleware FL - Florida GA - Georgia HI - Hawaii IA - Iowa ID - Idaho IL - Illinois IN - Indiana KS - Kansas KY - Kentucky LA - Louisiana MA - Massachusetts MB - Manitoba MD - Maryland ME - Maine MI - Michigan MN - Minnesota MO - Missouri MS - Mississippi MT - Montana NB - New Brunswick NC - North Carolina ND - North Dakota NE - Nebraska NF - Newfoundland NH - New Hampshire NJ - New Jersey NM - New Mexico NS - Nova Scotia NT - Northwest Territories NV - Nevada NY - New York OH - Ohio OK - Oklahoma ON - Ontario OR - Oregon PA - Pennsylvania PE - Prince Edward Island PQ - Quebec QC - Quebec RI - Rhode Island SC - South Carolina SD - South Dakota SK - Saskatchewan TN - Tennessee TX - Texas UT - Utah VA - Virginia VT - Vermont WA - Washington WI - Wisconsin WV - West Virginia WY - Wyoming YK - Yukon YT - Yukon Other
Team up with the NFL to tackle Prostate Cancer. Pick your team.
Select your team Broncos Jaguars Rams Seahawks Vikings Dolphins Lions Raiders Texans Steelers Colts Patriots
5299 DTC Blvd., Suite 345

59. Beampoint AB - Targeting Device For High Precision Radioation Therapy Of Prostat
The Beamcath method enhances external beam placement during prostate cancer treatment, thereby lowering the risk of radiation complications in adjacent organs.
http://www.beampoint.se
CONTACT PRODUCT
Targeting device for high precision radioation therapy of prostate cancer (This website are under construction)

60. Sloan-Kettering - Prostate Cancer
to Memorial SloanKettering, which is recognized worldwide for its strength in diagnosingand treating prostate cancer, prostate cancer treatment services
http://www.mskcc.org/mskcc/html/403.cfm
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createNavigationImageCache(1817,6053,1818,1819,2525,12256) Cancer Information Types of Cancer Prostate Cancer
Prostate Cancer
Cancer of the prostate is the most common cancer among American men (excluding skin cancer) and the second leading cause of cancer deaths (after lung cancer). A man's risk of developing prostate cancer increases with age. Although it can occur at any age, it is most often found in men over the age of 50, and more than 75 percent of tumors are found in men over age 65. In this section you can find up-to-date information about prostate cancer, and learn about Memorial Sloan-Kettering's expertise in caring for patients with this disease.
Overview
An overview of the prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and research of prostate cancer. Memorial Sloan-Kettering is recognized worldwide for its strength in diagnosing and treating prostate cancer. Screening Memorial Sloan-Kettering is one of the few centers that offers a computer-assisted family history analysis of prostate cancer risk.

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