Sounds filthy!

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rehema Mukooza
Sent: Thursday, March 18, 2004 1:09 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: ugnet_: Re: Advice for Treating Prostate Cancer Revival

 

Male Members:

 

If you want to avoid getting prostate cancer, you have got to work on it.  Here is my advise from experience with great pleasure in ecstacy! 

 

Give yourselves "Prostate Stimulations", or get a good woman now knows how to stimulate your prostates real good, now and again!  I bet it feels good, its the second best to heaven on earth!  That shit feels good!  That's what I heard!  Here are the directions to do it safe and well.

 

1).  Clean your anus out.

2).  Wash your hands.

3).  Use a condom on your fingures!  (recommended)

4).  Put lubrication on your two fingures.

5).  Insert your fingures slowly (not to hurt yourself) into your anus.

6).  Insert them inside your anus to a length of 2 inches.

7).  Slowly curve your figures upward, towards your male organ.

8).  Stroke slowly in the motion of upward-down, forward-bewards.

9).  At this point you should be able to feel (locate) the Prostate Gland.  It is a small notch, around that area.  If you are a normal guy, you would be able to locate it.

10). Once you spot it and you like the sensation, please go ahead and have fun.  And at the same time are saving your prostates from prostate cancer.

11). Prostate orgasms are strong and pleasurable.  You will cum, that's expected!  Hahahah, lololol!!

 

Prostate Stimulation has been found to be very effective towards the prevention of prostate cancer.  It has been found that men who never stimulated their prostates are the ones who get prostate cancer.  Avoid this from happening to you by following the directions I've given you.  They are very simple and easy yet pleasurable and healthy. 

 

Zakoomu R.

J Ssemakula <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Advice for Treating Prostate Cancer Revival

March 17, 2004

  By ANAHAD O'CONNOR

An estimated 30,000 men who have had surgery for prostate

cancer will relapse this year, and half of them will die.

But many of those patients can be saved, a new study says,

if doctors treat them with radiation therapy at the

earliest signs of recurrence.

In cases where prostate cancer appears to be returning

after surgery, doctors usually forgo local radiation

because they assume the disease has spread. Hormones, which

are helpful but cannot cure the disease, are typically

given instead.

But the latest study, published today in the Journal of the

American Medical Association, looked at 501 men who were

given radiation therapy in lieu of hormones and found that

about half lived at least four years without another

relapse.

In roughly two-thirds of patients who do not receive the

treatment, the cancer will spread within 10 years, said Dr.

Kevin M. Slawin, an author of the study and director of the

Baylor Prostate Center at the Baylor College of Medicine in

Houston.

Doctors can look for prostate cancer - the second-leading

cause of cancer deaths among men - by conducting blood

tests for rising levels of a protein called

prostate-specific antigen, or P.S.A. When levels start

climbing after surgery, it usually signals that the cancer

is returning. But many doctors either wait too long to give

the therapy or rule it out altogether, Dr. Slawin said.

"When it's rising, that's when radiation treatment should

be given," he said. "In a lot of these patients where it

was thought the disease would advance and little could be

done, we're finding that these men can actually be cured."

About 64 percent of subjects in the study whose levels of

the protein doubled within 10 months after surgery, and

whose initial prostate cancer was deemed moderately

aggressive, remained cancer-free for four years.

People who undergo radiation therapy can suffer unpleasant

side effects, including impotence, bladder dysfunction and

frequent bowel movements.

Dr. Timothy Wilson, director of the prostate cancer program

at the City of Hope medical center in Los Angeles, said

that the study's lack of a control group for comparison was

a flaw, but that he hoped the findings would lead to more

widespread use of radiation therapy.

"It adds to a small but growing body of evidence that this

is the right strategy," Dr. Wilson said. "Many of us

already know it's a good idea. Now, hopefully, it will work

its way into the medical literature and become the standard

of care."

Fewer than 20 percent of patients whose prostate cancer

returns undergo radiation therapy. Dr. Mitchell A. Anscher,

a professor of radiation oncology at Duke University

medical center, suggested that some patients would be

better off getting radiation treatment immediately after

surgery, when it is more effective and lower doses are

administered.

"People need to be aware that this is a problem we have a

potential solution for," Dr. Anscher said. "Only 13 percent

are offered radiation; the rest are offered nothing or

treated with hormones, which aren't curative."

Dr. Slawin warned that pre-emptively treating patients

after prostate surgery carried the risk of overtreating men

who might never have suffered a relapse.

"We already have a blood test that's very good at detecting

recurrences," he added.

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