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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Healthcare professionals do not know whether testicular cancer screening is particularly useful. For this reason, there are no screening guidelines for this condition. The same is true of testicular ...
Source: By Daerick Gross Sr from the “Guide To Getting It On.” This isn't a medical journal, so why are instructions for doing testicular exams being posted on Psychology Today? When you consider how ...
Do men want to perform testicular self-examination? This is an ASCO Meeting Abstract from the 2020 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium. This abstract does not include a full text component.
Of 924 patients included, 148 (16%) patients relapsed during a median follow-up of 6.3 years. Invasion of the testicular hilum (rete testis and hilar soft tissue), lymphovascular invasion, and ...