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Martin Kathrins, MD
Contributor
Dr. Martin Kathrins is an associate surgeon at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and assistant professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School. He is director of the men’s health center in the Brigham and Women’s department of urology.
Dr. Kathrins received his undergraduate degree from the University of Pennsylvania. He received his medical degree from Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, and completed his urology residency at the University of Pennsylvania. He subsequently completed a fellowship in male infertility, andrology, and microsurgery at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is board certified in urology.
Dr. Kathrins’ clinical interests include male infertility, hypogonadism, sexual dysfunction, and voiding dysfunction. Dr. Kathrins’ research focuses include severe male factor infertility and genitourinary cancer survivorship.

What can magnesium do for you and how much do you need?

Dry socket: Preventing and treating a painful condition that can occur after tooth extraction

What happens during sleep � and how to improve it

How is metastatic prostate cancer detected and treated in men over 70?

Could biofeedback help your migraines?

Plantar warts: Options for treating this common foot condition

Cancer survivorship: What comes next after treatment

Nutritional yeast: Does this savory, vegan seasoning pack a nutritional punch?

Salmonella is sneaky: Watch out

Two jobs may lower the odds of dying from Alzheimer's disease � but why?