Researchers from Stanford University uncovered this startling correlation.
The study highlights how color vision deficiency can delay bladder cancer diagnosis, increasing mortality risk and ...
A new Stanford Medicine study suggests that colorblindness may obscure one of the earliest warning signs of bladder cancer ...
Colorblind people might have a unique disadvantage in noticing an early warning sign of certain cancers, a new study suggests.
The earliest symptoms of bladder cancer may go unnoticed by patients with colorblindness or similar color vision deficiencies, a study published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature suggests.
People with color blindness may be less able to spot an early sign of bladder cancer, making them likelier to be diagnosed ...
Recognizing the sight of blood in urine, the most common first sign of bladder cancer, is often the impetus that leads people ...
Out of sight, out of mind. A new study suggests a common eye condition could be quietly masking one of the only early warning ...
Study suggests inability to identify blood in urine may delay diagnosis and reduce surviva ...
Primate species with better color vision are not more likely to have red skin or fur coloration, as previously thought. Primate species with better colour vision are not more likely to have red skin ...