## Background: It is not yet known whether screening for the detection of early prostate carcinoma will reduce mortality rates. however, data are available to assess intermediate outcomes from screening, including the performance characteristics of the screening tests and shifts in disease stage.
A nineteenth-century case of carcinoma of the prostate, with a note on the early history of the disease
โ Scribed by Tony Waldron
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 140 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1047-482X
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โฆ Synopsis
A case of prostatic carcinoma is described in the skeleton of a named individual who died in 1834. The tumour was recognized from widespread periosteal new bone throughout the skeleton and by the presence of sclerosing metastases in many bones, including the pelvis and all the vertebrae. A number of features of the disease present here are said to be uncommon in modern patients, including spiculated periosteal new bone and some degree of spinal stenosis. In two previous cases of prostatic carcinoma described in the literature, periosteal new bone was a prominent feature and was probably responsible for the disease being recognized. It is likely that if skeletons from mature males were routinely X-rayed, considerably more cases would be noted and a more accurate estimate of the prevalence of this disease in the past would thus be ascertained.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
RIORITY for the successful transplantation P of tumors is often credited to Hanau, who on November 28, 1888, inoculated two rats with a metastasis of a vulvar epidermoid carcinoma of a rat and observed growth and metastases of the neoplasm in the two recipients. T h e findings were published in 1889