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  2. Benign tumor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benign_tumor

    However, a benign tumor is not benign in the usual sense; the name merely specifies that it is not "malignant", i.e. cancerous. While benign tumors usually do not pose a serious health risk, they can be harmful or fatal. [2] Many types of benign tumors have the potential to become cancerous through a process known as tumor progression. For this ...

  3. Neoplasm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoplasm

    A neoplasm can be benign, potentially malignant, or malignant . [9] Benign tumors include uterine fibroids, osteophytes, and melanocytic nevi (skin moles). They are circumscribed and localized and do not transform into cancer. [8] Potentially-malignant neoplasms include carcinoma in situ. They are localised, and do not invade and destroy but in ...

  4. Fibroblastic and myofibroblastic tumors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fibroblastic_and_myo...

    It is a benign, small tumor located in the skin of the distal areas of the legs and, less commonly, the arm; it has occurred mostly in females. EWSR1-SMAD3-positive fibroblastic tumor was named based on the finding that its tumor cells express a EWSR1-SMAD3 fusion gene. Since its initial description in 2018, a total of 15 cases have been ...

  5. Vascular tumor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vascular_tumor

    A vascular tumor is a vascular anomaly where a tumor forms from cells that make blood or lymph vessels; a soft tissue growth that can be either benign or malignant. [1] Examples of vascular tumors include hemangiomas, hemangioendotheliomas, Kaposi's sarcomas, angiosarcomas, and hemangioblastomas. An angioma refers to any type of benign vascular ...

  6. Breast disease - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breast_disease

    A breast tumor is an abnormal mass of tissue in the breast as a result of neoplasia. A breast neoplasm may be benign, as in fibroadenoma, or it may be malignant, in which case it is termed breast cancer. Either case commonly presents as a breast lump. Approximately 7% of breast lumps are fibroadenomas and 10% are breast cancer, the rest being ...

  7. Dysplastic nevus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysplastic_nevus

    In this classification, a nevus can be defined as benign, having atypia, or being a melanoma. A benign nevus is read as (or understood as) having no cytologic or architectural atypia. An atypical mole is read as having architectural atypia and having (mild, moderate, or severe) cytologic (melanocytic) atypia. [12]

  8. Tumor of the stomach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumor_of_the_stomach

    In a benign tumor, the proliferated cells stay in one location where they do not impact or spread to other surrounding tissues. Malignant tumors, on the other hand, are capable of spreading throughout the entire body, causing new tumors to appear. This process is called metastasis, and is a hallmark of cancerous tumors. [2]

  9. Nervous system neoplasm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nervous_system_neoplasm

    Nervous system neoplasms include various types of brain and spinal cord tumors, such as gliomas, and meningiomas (of the CNS), and schwannomas (of the PNS) and can be either benign or malignant. [1] In the CNS a tumor may be a secondary malignant tumor having metastasised (spread from a primary site in the body).