What foods should you eat if you want to keep your prostate healthy? How does sexual activity affect the health of your prostate? What are ways you can prevent prostate cancer? What should African-American men know about prostate cancer? What are the best alternatives to radiation and surgery in treating prostate cancer? What are the symptoms of an unhealthy prostate?
These are some of the many important questions that are answered by Dr. Daniel W. Nixon, one of America's premier cancer research institute leaders, and Dr. Max Gomez, the charismatic health commentator whose reports are aired on NBC television stations nationwide. The authors not only provide indispensable guidance in cancer prevention but also offer a dynamic, new noninvasive treatment of prostate cancer. Packed with information, The Prostate Health Program explains in clear, simple language the link between obesity and prostate cancer, the difference between an enlarged prostate and a diseased one, the causes of frequent urination and pain, and the specific prostate problems pertaining to gay men.
Drs. Nixon and Gomez offer a user-friendly plan of diet, exercise, and behavioral change that men can easily incorporate into their lives. The authors explain why aggressive treatment, such as radiation and surgery, is often unnecessary, less effective, and more dangerous -- often leaving men incontinent and impotent -- than other treatments.
The cornerstones of this unique program are the Prostate Health Pyramid and the Transition Diet, both of which were created specifically for this book and are the ultimate tools in prostate cancer prevention, control, and treatment. First, the foods that protect the health of the prostate are identified; then, food changes are introduced slowly for more effective and long-lasting reform of eating habits. Best of all, quick and easy recipes created by chefs at the Culinary Institute of America provide a menu that is healthy and delicious.
With its combination of cutting-edge research and highly respected, world-renowned authors, The Prostate Health Program is the definitive defense against a deadly disease.
Autorentext
Daniel W. Nixon, M.D., is the president of the Institute for Cancer
Prevention and the editor-in-chief of the journal Preventive Medicine.
Formerly the associate director for Cancer Control and Prevention at the
Medical University of South Carolina/Hollings Center, Dr. Nixon has written
dozens of scholarly papers and is the author of The Cancer Recovery Eating
Plan: The Right Foods to Help Fuel Your Recovery. He lives in New York
City.
Max Gomez, Ph.D., has been the Health and Science editor of WNBC,
NBC's flagship station in New York, since 1991. His health reports are
carried on NBC stations both nationally and internationally. Dr. Gomez has
been honored with four New York Emmy Awards, two Philadelphia Emmys, a
UPI Best Documentary Award, and an Excellence in Time of Crisis award
from New York City. He was named the American Health Foundation's Man of
the Year in 1986 for his contributions to public awareness of vital health
issues. He lives in Westchester County, New York.
Inhalt
Acknowledgments
Introduction by Max Gomez, Ph.D.
I. Preventing Prostate Problems and Diseases
1. An Overview
Liberating Yourself The Nutrition Connection
The Exercise/Fitness/Lifestyle Connection
The Importance of Regular Checkups
Prostate Myths and Reality
2. The Healthy Prostate
Prostate Power The Male Urogenital System
Do I Have a Problem?
Risk Factors of Prostate Cancer
3. The Prostate Checkup
Warning Signs Basic Diagnostic Tests
When Should You See a Urologist?
II. The Prostate Health Pyramid and the Cancer Prevention Diet
4. The Prostate Health Pyramid and the Nutrition Connection
The Prostate Health Pyramid and the Basic Food Groups Nutritional Elements of the Prostate Health Pyramid
5. Negative Nutrition
The Fats and Calcium Controversies The Worst Foods for Your Prostate
The Irritants
Additives
Supplements: Good and Bad
6. The Transition Diet
A Gradual Approach A Better Way
Getting Ready -- Suiting Up
The Six Food Settings
The Five Passageways
A Parting Word
7. Menus and Recipes: Prostate Health, the Delicious Way!
Choosing the Right Meals
III. Prostate Health and Fertility
8. The Healthy Prostate Fitness Regimen
The Link Between Exercise and Prostate Health Can Exercise Prevent Prostate Cancer?
The Healthy Prostate Fitness Regimen
Aerobics: A Key to Prostate Health
Kegel Exercises (Pelvic Floor Exercises) for Men
Exercise After Prostate Surgery
9. Sex and the Prostate
The Prostate and Sexual Function
Impotence (Erectile Dysfunction)
Incontinence
Infertility
10. Prostatitis: A Little Tenderness Goes a Long Way
An Insufficiently Understood Disease The Three Faces of Prostatitis
Which Kind Do I Have?
Treatment Strategies for Bacterial Prostatitis
Treatment Options for Chronic Nonbacterial Prostatitis (CNP)
Diet and Lifestyle Changes
Gay Men and Prostatitis
Living with Prostatitis
11. When Size Matters: Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH)
What is BPH? Who Gets BPH?
Symptoms of BPH
When to See a Doctor
Treatment Options
Putting It All Together
12. Prostatodynia (Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndrome)
Symptoms of Prostatodynia Diagnosis of Prostatodynia
What Causes Prostatodynia?
Drawing a New Diagnostic Map of Prostatitis-Type Disorders
Treatment Options for Prostatodynia
Solving the Enigma of Prostatodynia
IV. Prostate Cancer
13. Guarding Against Prostate Cancer
The Institute for Cancer Prevention on Prostate Cancer The Institute for Cancer Prevention's Prostate Cancer Prevention Program
The PSA Test: Cutting Through the Controversy
Grading Prostate Cancer
Prostate Cancer Q&A: Things You Need to Know
In the Wake of Prostate Cancer: Coping and Getting On with Your Life
14. Treating Prostate Cancer
A Treatment Dilemma Determining the Right Treatment for Each Patient
Expectant Therapy
Radiation Therapy
Hormone Therapy
Chemotherapy
On the Horizon: The Prostate Cancer Vaccine
Biological Therapy
Gene Therapy: The Future of Prostate Cancer Treatment?
Surgery
Cryotherapy
Treating the Complications of Prostate Cancer
Relieving and Treating Pain
The Institute for Cancer Prevention's Prostate Cancer Symptoms and Treatment Charts
15. African Americans and Prostate Cancer
Stopping the Crisis Race and Age
A More Aggressive Incidence of the Disease
How Much Does Race Have to Do with It?
Possible Causatives and Risk Factors Other than Race
The Institute for Cancer Prevention's Ten-Step Plan to Prevent and Combat Prostate Cancer in African Americans
Hispanic Men and Prostate Cancer: No Easy Answers
V. Alternatives
16. Alternative Treatments
Outside the Realm What Is …