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Showing 1–9 of 9 results
Advanced filters: Author: Richard Wassersug Clear advanced filters
  • Many patients experience impaired erectile function after prostate cancer treatment and struggle to resume a satisfying sexual relationship. In this Perspectives article, Walker, Robinson and Wassersug provide healthcare professionals with recommendations to facilitate successful sexual recovery and the best outcome for patients and their partners.

    • Lauren M. Walker
    • Richard J. Wassersug
    • John W. Robinson
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Urology
    Volume: 12, P: 167-176
  • Effects of prostate cancer treatment in sex and gender minority groups, which include gay and bisexual men, transgender women, or transfeminine people, can include altered sexual function in relation to receptive anal and neovaginal intercourse and changes to patients’ role-in-sex, as well as changes in sexual pleasure related to the loss of the prostate as a source of sexual pleasure. In this Review, the authors discuss the prostate as a sexual organ and consider the effects of prostate cancer treatment in patients from these under-represented groups, as well as discussing the need for openness and counselling in patients from sexual and gender minorities.

    • Daniel R. Dickstein
    • Collin R. Edwards
    • Deborah C. Marshall
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Urology
    Volume: 20, P: 332-355
  • Since the discipline of space biology was launched over 40 years ago there have been many developments, some of which were reviewed and discussed at a workshop last month. The workshop was unusual in that it focused on the effects of microgravity above the cellular level -- in contrast to much of contemporary biology, which is concerned more with molecules.

    • Richard J. Wassersug
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 401, P: 758
  • Biological hydrostats (for example, elephants’ trunks or our own tongues) hold their shape because the pressure of the fluid inside is resisted by tension in the surrounding sheath. This sheath must be strong, and it is reinforced by helically wound supporting fibres in most hydrostats. But a new study shows that the penis of the nine-banded armadillo is reinforced by longitudinal and circumferential fibres -- a pattern that has never been seen before.

    • Richard Wassersug
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 388, P: 826-827