Skip to main content
  • Language
    • Afrikaans
    • Albanian
    • Arabic
    • Armenian
    • Azerbaijani
    • Basque
    • Belarusian
    • Bengali
    • Bulgarian
    • Catalan
    • Chinese (Simplified)
    • Chinese (Traditional)
    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Danish
    • Dutch
    • Esperanto
    • Estonian
    • Filipino
    • Finnish
    • French
    • Galician
    • Georgian
    • German
    • Greek
    • Gujarati
    • Haitian Creole
    • Hebrew
    • Hindi
    • Hungarian
    • Icelandic
    • Indonesian
    • Irish
    • Italian
    • Japanese
    • Kannada
    • Korean
    • Lao
    • Latin
    • Latvian
    • Lithuanian
    • Macedonian
    • Malay
    • Maltese
    • Norwegian
    • Persian
    • Polish
    • Portuguese
    • Romanian
    • Russian
    • Serbian
    • Slovak
    • Slovenian
    • Spanish
    • Swahili
    • Swedish
    • Tamil
    • Telugu
    • Thai
    • Turkish
    • Ukrainian
    • Urdu
    • Vietnamese
    • Welsh
    • Yiddish
  • 020 8907 6013/020 8907 6014
  • Font Size
    • Increase Font Size
    • Decrease Font Size
    • Reset Font Size
Dr Abu and Partners: Kenton Bridge Medical Centre
Search
Show Main Menu
  • Home
  • Appointments
    • Book / Cancel Appointment
    • Referrals
    • Self Care
    • Times & Out Of Hours
    • Who should I see?
  • Prescriptions
    • Repeat Prescriptions
    • Prescribing Wisely
    • Private Prescriptions
    • Community Pharmacy
    • Medicines A to Z
    • Warfarin
  • Services
    • Clinics
    • Fit notes & Sick notes
    • Join The Surgery
    • Managing Chronic Diseases
    • Minor Surgery
    • NHS Health Checks
    • Non-NHS Work
    • Online Services
    • Test Results
    • Vaccinations
    • Update Your Details
  • Surgery Information
    • Complaints
    • Disability Access
    • Feedback
    • Friends & Family Test
    • Our Team
    • Patient Participation Group
    • Policies
    • Practice Performance
    • Times & Out Of Hours
    • Training Practice
    • Vacancies
  • Health Information & Support
    • Cancer Screening
    • Childrens Health
    • COVID-19
    • Find your NHS number
    • Good thinking
    • Health A to Z
    • Healthy Lifestyle
    • Live Well
    • Local Support
    • Mens Health
    • NHS 111 Online
    • Planning a Family
    • Useful Links
    • Womens Health
  • Contact Us
Show Side Menu
  • Update Your Details

Key Information

  • COVID-19
Call 111 - When it is less urgent than 999
  • Live Well
  • Conditions A to Z

BBC Health News

  • GPs split over assisted dying plans, BBC research suggests14 May 2025 01:37GPs are deeply divided over assisted dying with personal beliefs shaping their views, BBC research reveals.
  • For, against, undecided: Three GPs give their views on assisted dying14 May 2025 01:58GPs from different areas of England tell us how they feel about plans to legalise assisted dying.
  • Government has no clear plan for NHS England abolition, say MPs14 May 2025 00:15Cross-party group of MPs say move is causing uncertainty at time when NHS is under huge pressure.
  • New hope for patients with breast cancer gene13 May 2025 16:04Treating patients with a drug before surgery greatly reduced the chances of the cancer coming back, a small trial found.
  • Child obesity clinics seeing BMIs over 5013 May 2025 08:48Many are from the most deprived areas, and a significant number are neurodivergent or have other health conditions, a study says.
  • Charity boss slams 'reprehensible' health trusts13 May 2025 12:46NHS trusts "try to stop" coroners issuing Prevention of Future Death reports, an inquiry hears.

Testicular Cancer

Although still rare compared to other cancers, testicular cancer is the most common cancer in men aged between 15-45 years with around 2,200-2,300 men being diagnosed each year. It is more common in Caucasian males.

If found at an early stage a cure rate of 98% is usually possible and even when testicular cancer has spread to other areas of the body cure can still be achieved. In fact according to recent research overall 96% of men diagnosed with any stage testicular cancer will be alive 10 years after treatment.

It is important to visit your GP as soon as you notice any lump or swelling on your testicle. Your GP will examine your testicles to help determine whether or not the lump is cancerous.

Symptoms

The earliest warning signs of testicular cancer usually include the following:

  • A change in size or shape of a testicle.
  • Swelling or thickening of a testicle.
  • A firm, smooth, initially painless, slow-growing lump or hardness in a testicle.
  • A feeling of testicular heaviness.

Useful links

  • Orchid – Fighting Male Cancer
  • Your Privates – Testicular Cancer Awareness
  • NHS – Testicular Cancer

Share

  • Print
  • Facebook
  • Bluesky
  • X (Twitter)
  • LinkedIn
Local Services
Home
Care
Advertise Your
Business Here
Recruitment

Site

  • Sign In
  • Sitemap
  • Back To Top

About

  • Disclaimer
  • Website Privacy
  • Website Accessibility
  • Cookies
  • Content Attribution

Contact

The Kenton Bridge Medical Centre

155-175 Kenton Road, Harrow, Middlesex, HA3 0YX

  • 020 8907 6013/020 8907 6014
© Neighbourhood Direct Ltd  2025
Website supplied by Oldroyd Publishing Group

Loading...

Local Services
Home
Care
Advertise Your
Business Here
Recruitment