AllExperts > Encyclopedia 
Search      
Find out about volunteering to AllExperts

Tumor: Encyclopedia BETA


Free Encyclopedia
 Index · Browse A-Z  · Questions and Answers ·
Encyclopedia

Browse A-Z
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZNum


License
Disclaimer

 
 
 
 
Free Online Courses
12 Weeks to Weight Loss
Take Charge of Stress
Learn How to Bake
Budgeting 101
Deeper Faith
DIY Fashion Makeover

       MORE E-COURSES
 
   

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  Misc

Tumor

: See the article about cancer for the main article about malignant tumors.

Tumor or tumour literally means "swelling", and is sometimes still used with that meaning. Tumor meaning swelling is one of the five classical characteristics of inflammation. However, the term is now primarily used to denote abnormal growth of tissue. This growth can be either malignant or benign. It is similar in meaning to a neoplasia.

Tumor Types: Malignant vs. benign

Malignant tumors are cancerous. Cancer has the potential to invade and destroy neighboring tissues and create metastases. Benign tumors do not invade neighboring tissues and do not seed metastases, but may locally grow to great size. They usually do not return after surgical removal.

An epithelial tumor is considered malignant if it penetrates the basal lamina and is considered benign if it does not.As people get older, they accumulate more mutations in their DNA. This means that the prevalence of tumors increases strongly with increasing age. It is also the case that the older a person with a tumor is, the higher the chances are that the tumor is malignant. For example, if a woman of 20 years old has a tumor in her breast it is very likely that the tumor is benign. However, if a woman of 70 has a tumor in her breast it is almost certain that it is malignant.

Anaplasia is a term that refers to the histologic grade of a tumor. Anaplastic tumors are poorly differentiated, meaning that their cells look primitive and do not resemble normal cells. Having anaplasia in a tumor usually means that the tumor is malignant, although a malignant tumor need not be anaplastic.

Tumor Types

Codes listed are ICD-O.
Tissue of originCell typeExample of Benign tumorExample of Malignant tumor
(8010-8720) epithelial ¦¦ (8050-8080) squamous epitheliumsquamous cell papilloma (8052/0)squamous cell carcinoma (8070/3)
--- ¦¦ (8090-8110) basal cell (only in skin)basal cell tumor (8090/1)basal cell carcinoma (8090-8097)
--- ¦¦ (8120-8130) transitional epitheliumtransitional cell papilloma (8120-8121)transitional cell carcinoma (8120-8130)
--- ¦¦ (8140-8380) glandular epitheliumadenoma (8140-8380, and others)adenocarcinoma (8140-8380, and others)
--- ¦¦ G cellsgastrinoma (8153/1)malignant gastrinoma (8153/3)
--- ¦¦ bile ducts epitheliumcholangiocellular adenoma (8160-8161)cholangiocellular carcinoma (8160-8161)
--- ¦¦ hepatocyteshepatocellular adenoma (8170/0)hepatocellular carcinoma (8170-8180)
--- ¦¦ tubules epithelium (kidney)renal tubular adenoma, oncocytoma (8290/0)renal cell carcinoma (Grawitz tumor) (8312/3)
--- ¦¦ melanocytesglomus tumor (8711/0)
melanocytic nevus (8720/0)
malignant melanoma (8720-8761)
(8800-9589) mesenchymal ¦¦ (8810-8830) fibrous connective tissuefibroma (8810-8823, among others)fibrosarcoma (8810-8814, 9330)
--- ¦¦ cardiac skeletonmyxoma (8840/0)myxosarcoma (8840/3)
--- ¦¦ (8850-8880) adipose tissuelipoma (8850-8862)liposarcoma (8851-8858)
--- ¦¦ (8890-8920) smooth muscleleiomyoma (8890-8898)leiomyosarcoma (8890-8896)
--- ¦¦ skeletal musclerhabdomyoma (8900-8905)rhabdomyosarcoma (8900-8921)
--- ¦¦ germ cellsbenign teratoma (9080/0)malignant teratoma (9080/3)
--- ¦¦ (9120-9160) blood vesselshemangioma (9120-9142)hemangiosarcoma (9120)
Kaposi sarcoma (9140)
--- ¦¦ (9170-9179) lymphatic vesselslymphangioma (9170-9175)lymphangiosarcoma (9170/3)
--- ¦¦ (9180-9210) boneosteoma (9180-9200)osteosarcoma (9180-9182) (osteogenic sarcoma)
--- ¦¦ (9220-9241) cartilagechondroma (9220-9221)chondrosarcoma (9220-9241)
--- ¦¦ (9530-9539) meningesmeningioma (9530-9538)malignant meningioma (9530/3)
(9590-9999) blood cells ¦¦ (9590-9979) lymphoid cells---non-Hodgkin lymphoma (9591, 9596)
Hodgkin lymphoma (9650/3-9667/3)
- ¦¦ leukemia (9800-9940)
See also: List of distinct cell types in the adult human body

Causes

Tumors are caused by mutations in DNA of cells. An accumulation of mutations is needed for a tumor to emerge. Mutations that activate oncogenes or repress tumor supressor genes can eventually lead to tumors. Cells have mechanisms that repair DNA and other mechanisms that cause the cell to destroy itself by apoptosis if DNA damage gets too severe. Mutations that repress the genes for these mechanisms can also eventually lead to cancer. A mutation in one oncogen or one tumor repressor gene is usually not enough for a tumor to occur. A combination of a number of mutations is necessary.

DNA microarrays can be used to determine if the expression of oncogenes or tumor repressor genes has been altered. Possibly in the future tumors can be treated better by using DNA microarrays to determine the exact characteristics of the tumor.

See also

*Tumor antigens



Email this page
About Us | Advertise on This Site | User Agreement | Privacy Policy | Kids' Privacy Policy | Help
About and About.com are registered trademarks of About, Inc. The About logo is a trademark of About, Inc. All rights reserved.
This is the "GNU Free Documentation License" reference article from the English Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. See also our Disclaimer.