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Prostate cancer and prostate stimuli connection "almost" proven?

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(@bartolo99)
Member Adventurer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 83
 

IMHO the cancer rates continue rise because of all the sugar in our food. If you want to reduce your chances of cancer cut down on sugar and feed your body healthy food. You are what you eat. Since it has been proven cannabis kills cancer cells and stress weakens the immune system, get high often for prevention and relaxation. That's my theory. The trick is to stay away from the sugar when the munchies kick in! :-))

LOL, I wish i lived in Colorado!

I don't have the gumption or courage to grow my own, and I don't have the confidence to find someone who sells it... I'm sure that word would get out through the grapevine, that I'm buying, etc etc. Most people don't care if others know about their mary-jane habit, but I do.

off-topic though.. carry on!



   
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(@euphemistic)
Prominent Member Customer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 922
 

Thank you armon for your clear understandable information about prostate cancer. What causes the varicoceles in the first place?

I came across this site http://new.aneros.com/ which says if you scroll down "Studies show that prostate massage helps reduce the risk of prostate cancer in 1 out of 6 men"

Compare that site to http://www.aneros.com. No mention of cancer! What's going on? Is the first site a reseller trying to confuse customers?



   
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(@blissan)
Active Member Customer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 6
 

IMHO the first one http://new.aneros.com/ looks as a fake, a misleading copy of the real site.



   
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(@theplaything)
Member Adventurer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 142
 

the new. bit is just a sub domain. And is more than likely to be a prototype for "new look" version of the current aneros.com site.



   
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(@alex_xxx)
Honorable Member Customer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 569
Topic starter  

Maybe this is a dumb question, but how is the lube in your anus getting to the prostate? I was under the assumption that the rectum is seperated from the prostate by the intestinal wall. So if that is the case then the type of lube you are using can permeate through the wall into the prostate??

It's absorbed. Your skin is the toughest, and even that absorbes stuff like creams. Thats my thoughts at least 🙂



   
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 Ehm
(@ehm)
Reputable Member Customer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 247
 

"Studies show that prostate massage helps reduce the risk of prostate cancer in 1 out of 6 men"

I don't know if it's because I'm tired but that's a really strange statistic. So a prostate massage will reduce the risk for 1 out of every 6 men but the chances are still there he'll get it never the less and for the other 5...they'll just have the same odds of getting prostate cancer as the national average!
And how will you ever know? Perhaps you were the 1 of 6 with reduced risk but got prostate cancer anyway or maybe you were one of 5 out of 6 that didn't have reduced risk and didn't get the disease.
I say stick it up your asshole smoke a numbah coz God doesn't play dice



   
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(@inhope)
Member Adventurer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 1250
 

Thanks ineverknew. Yeah I pee fine currently.

It doesn't make sense why I get the same pain occasionally with the aneros as I did when it was damaged/bruised all those years ago



   
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(@theplaything)
Member Adventurer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 142
 

could be piles...



   
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(@euphemistic)
Prominent Member Customer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 922
 

.



   
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(@euphemistic)
Prominent Member Customer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 922
 

" I say stick it up your asshole smoke a numbah coz God doesn't play dice"

Ehm, good place for it! This quote is from the knock-off aneros site http://new.aneros.com/.



   
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 Ehm
(@ehm)
Reputable Member Customer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 247
 

Lies, damned lies and statistics 🙂
I'll try and get my head around it next time I use the Aneros. If they'd just written reduces the risk of prostate cancer I'd be fine with it, but adding in 1 out of 6 is just ridiculous



   
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(@twlltin)
Honorable Member Customer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 650
 

I think the "new" site was a prototype (a couple of years ago) for the site we have now. I suspect they've forgotten to turn it off.



   
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(@mmgbenis)
Reputable Member Customer
Joined: 6 years ago
Posts: 343
 

@euphemisitic: you're welcome! Varicocele is the gradual loss of functional valves in the internal spermatic veins that drain the testes along the backwall of the abdomen. In a way it's comparable to the varicose veins we are more familiar with in the legs. In the same way, the vertically oriented veins in the legs and the back of the abdomen deteriorate. This is usually due to unknown causes, but probably has to do with a combination of mechanical "wear and tear", maybe a little inflammation with scarring of the delicate valves so they can't close, thus raising the hydrostatic (liquid column) pressure in the veins, which makes them dilate and makes more valves fail in a vicious cycle, until the venous pressure at the level of the pelvis becomes elevated and the flow of testosterone out of the testes is shunted towards the prostate.@inhope: What theplaything wrote just about sums "prostatic malfunction" up. I was basically referring to what is called "prostatism" which may be manifested by any or all of the symptoms theplaything described---don't get any worried, @inhope, you are too young for those (it's more common after the age of 50).
:)>- @Alex_xxx: Though I agree with avoiding lubes and gels with all those additives (have a look at KY Jelly, for example), and while some of those Parabens may have estrogenic or who knows what other long term effects, it is a very long shot to connect the use of any anal lube to prostate cancer. We do know that smoking influences/causes bladder cancer, but I don't know of any definite connection between the poisons from smoking that make their way into the urine and prostate cancer.

To all: For the sake of transparency about my posting above: Our published papers are not looked upon favorably by the Urologic community even though several of our articles have appeared in the mainstream urologic scientific literature: Journal of Urology and European Urologic Review. My presentations at urologic symposia have been met with scepticism. I am about to present our work at a meeting of state of the art angiography in NYC in two weeks and there may be some fireworks there, as well,

I have been using my Aneros devices for over two years and intend to continue doing so. I'm lying here with my PG, jr, in place as I write this, and can feel it calling me....so I'll stop here. Cheers
😉 😉



   
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(@thruster)
Member Adventurer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 43
 

@Armon-neat - Good luck in NY. If I see fireworks, I'll be thinking of you! (I'm just over the river, in NJ.) Congratulations and much thanks for your brilliant work. The disfavor and skepticism is inevitable, as the cancer industry, especially in the US, has cultivated a vast money-making machine. Exposure of their thievery by a couple of foreigners from halfway 'round the world will not be tolerated.



   
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(@engorged)
Member Adventurer
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 110
 

Everything causes cancer. Everything cures cancer. In the end we will perish anyways.



   
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B Mayfield
(@b-mayfield)
Member Adventurer Registered
Joined: 8 years ago
Posts: 2118
 

@Armon-neat,

Thank you for your contributions here and in other threads. As one who was treated with antibiotic therapy continuously over 2 years back in the 80's for prostatitis (and this by a former President's physician), I am fully aware of the state of inertia that exists in the urological community when it comes to embracing new ideas. While these are undoubtedly intelligent folks many of them function like veritable "Knights of Templar" ..as defenders of the failed paradigm.

After 15 years of being buffeted about by various other physicians operating under the same medical model, I came upon one with radically different ideas on the subject. His treatment involved dietary changes and anti-inflammatory herbs (Quercetin and Bromelain). While this was not an immediate fix, over a period of months it eventually led to a resolution of my condition, to my great relief. Even though this doctor was once the head of urology at a major metropolitan hospital he too told of making similar presentations and of being scoffed at in professional circles.

The majority of cases that a urologist will see in his/her career involve (on the male end of it) intractable conditions like prostatitis, CPPS, IC, in addition to BPH, and prostate cancer. The true causes of all of these conditions remains a mystery with few recognized treatment options available. Given that and the suffering that's taking place, it's astonishing that so many in this field of medicine are hunkered down, closed-off and generally unreceptive to new ideas on mechanisms of causation.

I applaud your efforts to seek answers to these questions and strongly encourage you to stay the course. We are counting on you for that new paradigm, the one that encompasses an understanding of the causes and an effective treatment for these diseases. As the case of H. pylori and stomach ulcers reminds us....the truth finds a way.

All the best!

BF Mayfield



   
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(@mmgbenis)
Reputable Member Customer
Joined: 6 years ago
Posts: 343
 

@BFMayfield : thanks for your encouragement. It is an honor to get a note from you, whose sage advice has been so helpful in my journey and so many others. Well, here I am lying in my hotel room at the end of the meeting. My talk was on Tuesday.It went well and I was told that my ten minute "crash course" (all speakers got only ten minutes) was the highlight of yhat mornings session. This was the first time ( on this side of the Atlantic) that I have spoken with my radiologist/ angiographers peers-- the ones who would be learning the procedure. Many of these skilled interventional radiologists are doing spectacular deeds that are saving lives after stroke or saving limbs from amputation by reopening blood vessels without surgery. And dozens of other remarkable life saving procedures, so I'm not sure that the low key procedure we've developed can offer them the "glory" or the adrenaline rush that they get when they've salvaged a limb or a threatened transplanted liver. but, there is hope that some will adopt it, since it is safe and the learning curve is not too steep. So I'm all full of adrenaline myself at 1:45 am with my Progasm ice inside making me pause as it begins to gently churn and make "contact" and I'm enjoying the release of tension with the talk over. I actually had an amazing session with my helix Syn last night. I tried something recommended well over a year ago once things got started for me in the session-- kneeling at the side of the bed and letting the device do it's magic that way. Whoa, that was intense and I was on a plateau of ecstasy for nearly an hour.
I'll keep you all posted. Happy riding to all!



   
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