Research shows people with color blindness face higher bladder cancer mortality because early blood-in-urine warning signs may go unnoticed.
By Dr. Sanchari Sinha Dutta, Ph.D. A large electronic health record study suggests that difficulty recognizing painless blood ...
The earliest symptoms of bladder cancer may go unnoticed by patients with colorblindness or similar color vision deficiencies ...
Recognizing the sight of blood in urine, the most common first sign of bladder cancer, is often the impetus that leads people ...
Nearly 20,000 women are diagnosed with bladder cancer each year, according to the American Cancer Society, with most being over age 55. And the unfortunate reality is that women are often diagnosed at ...
For most people with bladder cancer, the first red flag is literally red: blood in the urine. But for people with color blindness, that warning sign may be easy to miss — and missing it could prove ...
A retrospective cohort study suggested that people with color blindness may have a higher risk of mortality from bladder cancer compared with those who can see colors. The researchers hypothesized ...
A new Stanford Medicine study suggests that colorblindness may obscure one of the earliest warning signs of bladder cancer ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. People with color blindness ...
Researchers have taken a look at survival rates of cancer patients who have color vision deficiency (CVD), finding that ...
Out of sight, out of mind. A new study suggests a common eye condition could be quietly masking one of the only early warning ...