FX Medicine

Home of integrative and complementary medicine

Mens-health

 

Complementary Medicine and Male Sexual Function with Lisa Costa-Bir and Daniel Robson

Nov 28, 23
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Daniel Robson and Lisa Costa-Bir discuss the delicate but often avoided topic of male sexual dysfunction.

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Men’s Mental Health: A patient’s perspective with Dr. Michelle Woolhouse and Nick Bracks

Oct 31, 23
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Join Nick Bracks, male mental health activist, on this patient-centred conversation on tackling the mental health challenges faced by men, and top tips to overcoming this ongoing health issue. 

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REPLAY: Male Infertility & Challenges to Sperm Health with Emma Sutherland and Belinda Kirkpatrick

Jul 25, 23
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Nutritionist and fertility specialist Belinda Kirkpatrick joins our Ambassador Emma Sutherland to discuss male infertility, focusing in particular on sperm health.

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Reshaping Perspectives on Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia and Prostate Cancer with Dr Mark Donohoe

Mar 06, 19
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Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) and Prostate Cancer are some of the biggest health issues facing men today. Dr Mark Donohoe takes us through the changing approaches to this in healthcare.

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Feb 18, 19
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Healthy hormone balance and general fitness and wellbeing are essential to male health, and underpin a healthy reproductive function as well as fertility, stamina, vitality, optimal libido and a healthy sexual function. 

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Feb 04, 19
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When considering treatment options for male performance support, as practitioners, we automatically think of traditional male tonics such as Tribulus terrestris (tribulus) and Turnera diffusa (damiana). Other herbs we should be considering for supporting male physiology include Panax ginseng (Korean ginseng) and Withania somnifera (withania). This article explores the traditional use of male tonic herbs and provides modern clinical relevance. 

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Feb 01, 19
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Even with the abundance of food we find in the western world, nutritional deficiencies are still common,[1] often due to nutrient-deplete food choices, poor farming practices or a lack of nutrients in the soil.[2]

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Oct 12, 18
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Hyperhomocysteinaemia may arise from genetic defects of several enzymes involved in homocysteine metabolism including MTHFR, MTR and CBS.

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