No. Someone having an enlarged prostate does not mean they will develop cancer.
It's possible, but no correlation between working in a radiation plant and prostate cancer has been established.
Hypertrophy of the prostate (BPH) is a condition in which there is a non-cancer abnormal growth of prostate cells in number and size. It is an usual condition which comes with ages, i.e. when you reach your 50s your prostate will get enlarged.
J. E. Castro has written: 'The treatment of prostatic hypertrophy and neoplasia' -- subject(s): Cancer, Hypertrophy, Prostate, Prostatic Hypertrophy, Prostatic Neoplasms, Therapy
lung cancer is in the lungs, prostate cancer is in the prostate.
No. There is no connection between calcium and prostate cancer.
There is no known link between LSD and prostate cancer.
Hugh H. Young has written: 'Urological roentgenology' -- subject- s -: Urography 'Studies on hypertrophy and cancer of the prostate' -- subject- s -: Fistula, Prostatic Neoplasms, Prostatic Hypertrophy
No.
Gunnar Willer Vestby has written: 'Vaso-seminal vesiculography in hypertrophy and carcinoma of the prostate with special reference to the ejaculatory ducts' -- subject(s): Prostate, Radiography, Diseases, Cancer, Seminal vesicles
There is no connection between the two.
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.
The Prostate Cancer Infolink. http://www.comed.com/prostate.