TY - BOOK AU - Robert L. Bard • AU - Jurgen J. Fütterer AU - Dan Sperling TI - Image Guided Prostate Cancer Treatments SN - 9783642404283 PY - 2014/// CY - London. New York PB - Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg KW - Oncology N1 - Includes Index N2 - The practice of medicine is a commitment to lifetime learning applied in the service of patients. For any of us who practice, the simple truths that we learned in medical school have been found no longer simple and no longer true. The advances in oncologic analysis, imaging, and treatment options with respect to prostate cancer have shown great expansion in the last 40 years, and the authors have taken pains to make the details of these advances accessible to generalists and specialists of all stripes. Initially, the identification of prostate cancer was limited by the ability of the probing finger to feel that part of the prostate that was accessible. Often the first identification of the cancer was the appearance of the spread to bone at a time that the rectal examination was still normal. The development of the PSA test helped identify patients that required more aggressive investigation, but the variety of benign conditions producing PSA elevations resulted in often unnecessary invasive biopsies. Early imaging was crude and the inherent errors did not dissuade the urologist from pursuing biopsy or help him in guiding the biopsy in the areas of greatest likelihood of malignant disease. The improvement of imaging techniques with power Doppler ultrasound, sonographic elastography, high-resolution MRI, and the organization of these techniques into a multimodal approach has dramatically changed the field of prostate cancer diagnosis. No longer is every PSA elevation an obligation to biopsy nor are the appropriate biopsies blindly directed. Judgments of the severity of disease allow many patients to be followed expectantly, confident that changes in the underlying condition will be identified soon enough to change course. Furthermore, when those changes are identified, the biopsy can be directed to the specific area of concern. These improvements in diagnostic techniques have been paralleled by the development of more focused modalities of treatment. Therapeutic ultrasound, laser, and photodynamic therapies are being actively investigated to ascertain their roles in the spectrum of prostate malignancies. We are at an exciting time in the development of knowledge in the identification and treatment of prostate cancer, and the authors are leaders in these fields and this volume brings the reader up to speed on these developments ER -