View Single Post
Old 02-09-06, 01:15 AM   #1 (permalink)
Obesity Discussion
Administrator
 
Obesity Discussion's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Posts: 7,851

Weight Statistics

8/1/2006
Start Date:
185 lb
Start Weight:
152 lb
Current Weight:
155 lb
Goal Weight:
-33 lb
Weight Loss:
5/1/2007
Goal Date:
Send a message via AIM to Obesity Discussion Send a message via Yahoo to Obesity Discussion
Weight Worries and Prostate

Weight Worries and Prostate

There's no shortage of good reasons for men to keep their weight under control. But now add one more: According to a new study, overweight men diagnosed with prostate cancer are significantly more likely to suffer a recurrence than men of normal weight.

One of the easiest ways to diagnose faltering prostate health is by measuring blood levels of prostate specific antigen (PSA) a protein produced largely—but not exclusively—by the prostate gland. When the prostate is removed during cancer surgery, PSA levels should fall to almost nothing. If they start to climb again, that's a worrisome sign of relapse.

Epidemiologist Sara Strom of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer center in Houston Studied 526 prostate cancer patients and found that those who were obese by age 40 were twice as likely to show rising PSA levels after surgery as those who weren't. In special danger, according to her findings, were men whose weight gain had come on relatively rapidly—about 3.5 lbs. per year—between ages 25 and the time of their diagnosis.

Strom's findings can help urologists and oncologists plan treatments and make prognoses for overweight men who develop prostate cancer. Just as important, they provide one more incentive for overweight men to shed extra pounds before they get sick, and for normal weight men to stay that way.

http://time.blogs.com/daily_rx/2005/..._worries_.html
__________________
Obesity Discussion is offline   Reply With Quote