Testicular cancer occurs when cancer cells develop in one, or sometimes both, of the testicles. The testicles are a gland that produces sperm and testosterone. Performing regular testicular self-exams ...
You check your car's oil and your smoke detectors, but are you checking your own body? Urologist Dr. John Smith joins the Who Cares guys to emphasize the importance of regular testicular self-exams, a ...
There’s no standard medical screening test for testicular cancer. But regular self-exams can help you catch it in an early stage, increasing your likelihood of a positive outcome. Testicular cancer is ...
Testicular cancer is not very common, but it deserves careful consideration because it can act rapidly in nonseminomatous germ cell tumours, which are more virulent than seminomas. Testicular cancer ...
Self-examination and awareness of the signs of testicular cancer are crucial, and yet over a quarter of UK men have never checked their testicles, while a third do not know the warning signs of ...
When doctors can detect it early, testicular cancer is usually highly treatable. Yet not everyone may know the importance of self-exams for this type of cancer. Cancer and health organizations aim to ...
UC San Diego Health is the first health system in the country to offer a new blood test for testicular cancer, officials announced Monday. The test, a decade in the making, is being touted by UCSD ...
UC San Diego Health is the first health system in the country to offer a new blood test for testicular cancer, officials announced Monday. The test, a decade in the making, is being touted by UCSD ...
It’s easy to think of these numbers as just statistics that will never have a personal impact on you or a loved one. To be honest, that’s what I thought, and I’m a doctor. But then I became part of ...
UC San Diego Health is the first health system in the country to offer a new blood test for testicular cancer, officials announced Tuesday. The test, a decade in the making, is being touted by UCSD ...