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  2. Colorectal adenoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorectal_adenoma

    Histopathology of high-grade dysplasia in a tubulovillous adenoma, in this case seen mainly as loss of cell polarity, as cells become more plump and haphazard than the elongated and parallel nuclei of surrounding low-grade dysplasia.

  3. Colorectal polyp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorectal_polyp

    1–2 tubular adenomas <10 mm: 7–10 years 3–4 tubular adenomas <10 mm: 3–5 years 5–10 tubular adenomas <10 mm and/or; Adenoma 10 mm and/or; Adenoma with tubulovillous or villous histology and/or; Adenoma with high-grade dysplasia; 3 years >10 adenomas on single examination: 1 years Piecemeal resection of adenoma 20 mm: 6 months

  4. Polyp (medicine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polyp_(medicine)

    If dysplasia develops Inflammatory bowel disease, ulcers, infections, mucosal prolapse Tubular Adenoma (Villous, Tubulovillous) Colorectal Tubular glands with elongated nuclei (at least low-grade atypia) Yes Traditional serrated adenoma: Colorectal Serrated crypts, often villous architecture, with cytologic atypia, eosinophilic cells Yes

  5. Adenoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adenoma

    [citation needed] Different adenomas will grow at different rates, but typically physicians can anticipate the rates of growth because some types of common adenomas progress similarly in most patients. [citation needed] Two common responses are removing the adenoma with surgery and then monitoring the patient according to established guidelines.

  6. Gastrointestinal intraepithelial neoplasia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastrointestinal...

    It begins with normal tissue and long-term inflammation causes the cells to undergo atrophy, metaplasia, dysplasia, and finally, becomes an adenoma or carcinoma. [2] Given this progression, these lesions represent a potentially cancerous growths and an important opportunity to prevent gastrointestinal cancer.

  7. M8263/0 Tubulovillous adenoma, NOS villoglandular adenoma; Papillotubular adenoma; M8263/2 Adenocarcinoma in situ in tubulovillous adenoma; M8263/3 Adenocarcinoma in tubulovillous adenoma Papillotubular adenocarcinoma; Tubulopapillary adenocarcinoma; M8264/0 Papillomatosis, glandular Biliary papillomatosis (C22.1, C24.0) M8270/0 Chromophobe ...

  8. Sessile serrated lesion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sessile_serrated_lesion

    Sessile serrated adenomas were first described in 1996. [10] In 2019, the World Health Organization recommended the use of the term "sessile serrated lesion," rather than sessile serrated polyp or adenoma. [6]

  9. Familial adenomatous polyposis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Familial_adenomatous_polyposis

    From early adolescence, patients with this condition gradually (and much of the time asymptomatically) develop hundreds to thousands of colorectal polyps (and sometimes polyps elsewhere)—small abnormalities at the surface of the intestinal tract, especially in the large intestine including the colon or rectum.