October 27, 2015 Antioxidants tied to older men's sperm quality, study finds Middle-aged and older men who get enough antioxidants in their diets, through eating foods such as broccoli and tomatoes, may have better-quality sperm than men who don't get as much of the nutrients
October 27, 2015 Foods that improve your looks Forget about grooming – with these 8 foods, you can eat yourself handsome
October 27, 2015 Dads who co-sleep with kids show dip in testosterone Fatherhood consumes a lot of time and energy – and for fathers who sleep near their tots, it temporarily costs them testosterone, too
October 27, 2015 The Climb of His Life: Man With Cerebral Palsy Will Scale 3,000-Foot Mountain Steve Wampler, who has cerebral palsy, will climb El Capitan -- a 3,000-foot mountain located in Yosemite National Park
October 27, 2015 The secret to being more confident Mirror, mirror on the wall, who’s the fairest of them all? Apparently it’s not the person who spends the most time in front of it
October 27, 2015 Tomato compound may cut men's stroke risk Eating tomatoes and other foods rich in the antioxidant lycopene may reduce men's risk of stroke, new research suggests
October 27, 2015 Perceived discrimination linked to smoking and poor diet Feeling like the target of discrimination may increase a person's odds of harmful behaviors like smoking, eating fatty foods and getting less sleep, a study of African-Americans suggests.
October 27, 2015 Who's your daddy: Most men raising their own biological children Despite the popularity of paternity tests and the guest lineup of the "Maury Povich" show, most men are not being duped into raising children who are not their own, new research suggests.
October 27, 2015 French men not producing as much sperm Researchers found that between 1989 and 2005, the number of sperm in one milliliter of the average 35-year-old Frenchman's semen fell from about 74 million to about 50 million - a decrease of roughly 32 percent
October 27, 2015 Prostate cancer hormonal therapy tied to kidney risks Men who are treated for prostate cancer with hormone-targeted therapy have a higher risk of developing kidney problems, a new study suggests.