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Men who turn to intracavernosal injection (ICI) therapy following prostate surgery can generate a satisfactory rigid erection with as few as five practice (trial) injections, according to studies presented at the 2008 Fall Scientific Meeting of the Sexual Medicine Society of North America.

Erectile dysfunction is a fact of life for many men who receive treatment for prostate cancer, but methods of measuring post-treatment ED and erectile function recovery suffer from a lack of standardization, according to studies presented at the Sexual Medicine Society of North America 2008 Fall Scientific Meeting.

Hypogonadism, or low serum testosterone, is associated with the unpleasant sequelæ of fatigue, low sex drive, diminished erections, and an increased tendency for fractures due to decreased bone mineral density.

Bladder cancer is more likely to be fatal for women and African-Americans, but University of Rochester researchers report that factors traditionally cited for these higher mortality rates are responsible for only about one-third of the difference between white men and women and up to two-thirds of the difference between African-Americans and their white counterparts.

Donald F. Gleason, MD, PhD, 88, died of a heart attack Dec. 28 in Edina, MN. Dr. Gleason, who retired from the University of Minnesota Medical School in 1986, was a central figure in the development of the Gleason grading system for prostate cancer tumors.

The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued patent numbers to cover Aureon Laboratories, Inc.?s systems and methods for evaluating the occurrence of any medical condition in a patient where clinical, imaging, and molecular data are combined and appraised.

Ferring Pharmaceuticals, USA has received FDA approval to market degarelix, an injectable gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) receptor antagonist, indicated for patients with advanced prostate cancer.

Universal intraoperative cystoscopy following hysterectomy allows immediate repair of injuries to the ureter and bladder that would otherwise go undetected, according to a study published in Obstetrics & Gynecology (2009; 113:6-10).