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Glossary

Starting with A for "ACE inhibitor" and continuing through to Y for "Yolk Sac Tumour", we give you succinct explanations for scientific and medical terms in clear and simple words.




A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Tumour
A locally restricted increase in tissue volume (growth, blastoma, neoplasia) which comes from excessive growth of endogenous tissue. The excessive growth occurs spontaneously, is uninhibited to differing degrees, is free from regulation from other parts of the body and is irreversible. This growth is generally connected to the loss of certain cell and tissue functions and is only partially or not at all under the physiological control of the organism.

Classification: 1. according to the origin of the tissue, 2. according to the biological behaviour: a) Benign tumours: these grow slowly, possess clear borders, are sometimes encapsulated in connective tissue and usually remain at their site of origin. b) Malignant tumours: These grow rapidly, do not have clear borders, and when they grow they penetrate into and destroy neighbouring tissue. They frequently form metastases. C) Semimalignant tumours. These penetrate and destroy when they grow, but do not form metastases. Benign tumours can become malignant, which means that they may be a sort of transition stage in the malignant transformation of normal cells.

In the extended sense, a tumour is any localised swelling from the accumulation of aqueous fluid in tissue (oedema), acute and chronic inflammation, restricted dilatation of an artery (aneurysm) or swelling of an organ as a result of inflammation (e.g. the so-called spleen tumour).

Glossary entries:  Roche and Walter de Gruyter, Berlin