In some cases, yes it can affects the prostate. usually happen to the patient that have enlarged prostate gland ( due to some disease ) and the injection of sclerotherapy too close or had direct contact to the prostate gland.
Latitude Affects temperature.
the heat affects the movement of the mantle
Disease affects the structure or function of an organism.
Ozone affects UV rays. These are harmful rays of the sun.
The Gulf Stream largely affects the climate of Florida. It also affects the climate of the entire North American east coast from Florida to Newfoundland.
It affects many men past 50 years of age
They mean the same thing: Prostate neoplasm is the medical term for prostate cancer; they both refer to the rapid growth of new abnormal prostate tissue (characterized by increased cellular division and proliferation) and that do not stop after disappearance of the factors (stimuli) that started this abnormal growth.
prostate cancer
prostate cancer is a disease which only affects men. Cancer begins to grow in the prostate - a gland in the male reproductive system. The cancer cells may spread from the prostate to other parts of the body. it can cause difficulty urinating, blood in the urine, or pain in the pelvis. nutrition2000.com
Prostatism refers to urinary tract symptoms in men. It is not necessarily cancerous. It can be a benign swelling of the prostate that may cause discomfort and even slowed or blocked urine flow. This normally affects older men.
andropathy think of internal organs that only men have, such as prostate gland, a woman can't have BPH or cancer since there is no prostate, same apply to testicles.
The speed of injection affects the size of the product in various ways. In general, the faster the injection speed, the smaller the size of the product. The main reason for this is that faster injection speeds result in shorter cooling times and therefore less time for crystallization to occur.
Usually, a man will die from something other than prostate cancer because it is a slow moving disease, and it usually affects older men. There are certain fast moving types of prostate cancer that if contracted by a younger man in their 40's may well be the cause of their death.
It can.Any type of cancer can metastasize and spread itself to other locations in the body, including the brain.However, if the prostate cancer is stopped before it spreads than no; just having cancer in the prostate will not affect the brain; it would need to metastasize and spread to the brain as a tumor before affecting it.
Do you mean prostate cancer that has spread to the bone? Or survival rates for prostate cancer versus bone cancer? In the case of the former, I believe the prognosis is bad. The highest 10 year survival rates (http://longevity.about.com/od/longevityandillness/a/prostate_le.htm) for prostate treatment is a prostatectomy (surgical prostate removal), but if the cancer has already spread to the bone then prostate removal will not solve the problem, because the cancer has already metastasized. In the case of the latter, there are different demographics and different subtypes of cancer to compare! This, combined with different treatment options, dramatically affects the survival rate.
No. Prostate cancer affects the prostate, and breast cancer affects the breasts. They affect different types of cells, and the cells have different types of changes.
When men grow old they experience hormonal changes that cause the prostate gland to grow. Prostate cells multiply as a result and pretty soon the prostate may grow so big that it affects urinary flow and function. If you're looking for natural options at this time, you might try beta sitosterol. There are scientific studies that support its use and you'll find them online.