Risk
of suicide and heart attacks goes up when
men are told they have prostate cancer
(NaturalNews)
Imagine you are a man who has just been told
you have a disease that might kill you --
prostate cancer. And the treatment may involve
surgery, chemotherapy, radiation and/or
hormones that could rob you of your virility,
wreck your sex life and even interfere with
your ability to urinate. Sound depressing
and even terrifying? To some men, this disturbing
news may actually be a lot more dangerous
than their prostate cancer. A new study just
published in PLoS Medicine has found that
men newly diagnosed with prostate cancer have
an increased risk of cardiovascular events
and suicide -- with the youngest men being
the most vulnerable.
Researchers
from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm,
Sweden, and Harvard University used the Swedish
Cancer Register to identify 168,584 men 30
years old or older who were diagnosed with
prostate cancer between 1961 and 2004. The
research team then turned to Sweden's Causes
of Death Register and Inpatient Register to
compile information on how many of these men
suffered from subsequent fatal or non-fatal
cardiovascular events and suicides.
The results
showed that prior to 1987, men were approximately
11 times more likely to have a fatal
cardiovascular event during the first week
after they were told they had prostate cancer
than men without the disease. Throughout
the first year after their diagnosis, men
with prostate cancer were about twice as likely
to have a heart attack as men without prostate
cancer. After 1987, men diagnosed with prostate
cancer were about three times as likely to
have a cardiovascular event during the first
week as undiagnosed men, and they had a persistent,
slightly raised risk in the first year.
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