Neoplastic Process
neoplasm
Subclass of:
Diseases (MeSH Category)
Definitions related to neoplasms:
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(tumor) Any type of swelling or enlargement of tissues; most often used to describe an abnormal growth of tissue, which can be cancerous or noncancerous.Harvard Dictionary of Health TermsHarvard Medical Publishing, 2011
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A benign or malignant tissue growth resulting from uncontrolled cell proliferation. Benign neoplastic cells resemble normal cells without exhibiting significant cytologic atypia, while malignant cells exhibit overt signs such as dysplastic features, atypical mitotic figures, necrosis, nuclear pleomorphism, and anaplasia. Representative examples of benign neoplasms include papillomas, cystadenomas, and lipomas; malignant neoplasms include carcinomas, sarcomas, lymphomas, and leukemias.NCI ThesaurusU.S. National Cancer Institute, 2021
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An abnormal mass of tissue that results when cells divide more than they should or do not die when they should. Neoplasms may be benign (not cancer), or malignant (cancer).NCI Dictionary of Cancer TermsU.S. National Cancer Institute, 2021
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An organ or organ-system abnormality that consists of uncontrolled autonomous cell-proliferation which can occur in any part of the body as a benign or malignant neoplasm (tumour).Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO)The Human Phenotype Ontology Project, 2021
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New abnormal growth of tissue. Malignant neoplasms show a greater degree of anaplasia and have the properties of invasion and metastasis, compared to benign neoplasms.NLM Medical Subject HeadingsU.S. National Library of Medicine, 2021
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(neoplastic growth) Growth of the tumor after morphology of cell has changed; cells may or may not have transformed to a cancerous state.CRISP ThesaurusNational Institutes of Health, 2006
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Tumour, a mass of abnormal tissue that arises without obvious cause from preexisting body cells, has no purposeful function, and is characterized by a tendency to independent and unrestrained growth. Tumours are quite different from inflammatory or other swellings because the cells in tumours are...Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc., 2020
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