There are benign prostate nodules. The common benign prostate nodules are adenomatous hyperplastic nodules of the prostate. The imaging shows an intact envelope, regular morphology, internal homogeneity, and the absence of abnormal hypointense and hyperintense shadows. Symptomatically, there are no obvious symptoms of bleeding or pain, but they are accompanied by regular symptoms such as difficulty in urination, bifurcation of urination, urinary frequency, and urinary urgency. At the time of surgical treatment, raised verrucous growths are seen that gradually decrease in size with surgical excision and do not differ in color and density from normal prostate tissue. For further identification, a prostate-specific antigen test can also be performed, which requires fasting blood to be drawn for the test. If the test result is less than 4 ng/L, the test is normal. If adenomatous nodules are present and prostate-specific antigen is elevated, malignancy may be suspected.