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Neoplasia Information

Neoplasm is an abnormal mass of tissue as a result of neoplasia. Neoplasia ("new growth" in Greek) is the abnormal proliferation of cells. The growth of neoplastic cells exceeds and is not coordinated with that of the normal tissues around it. The growth persists in the same excessive manner even after cessation of the stimuli. It usually causes a lump or tumor. Neoplasms may be benign, pre-malignant (carcinoma in situ) or malignant (cancer).

In modern medicine, the term tumor means a neoplasm that has formed a lump. In the past, the term tumor was used differently. Some neoplasms do not cause a lump.

Contents

Types

A neoplasm can be benign, potentially malignant (pre-cancer), or malignant (cancer). [1]

Difficulty of definition

Because neoplasia includes very different diseases, it is difficult to find an all-encompassing definition. [2] The definition of the British oncologist R.A. Willis is widely cited: A neoplasm is an abnormal mass of tissue, the growth of which exceeds and is uncoordinated with that of the normal tissues, and persists in the same excessive manner after cessation of the stimulus which evoked the change.[3]

This definition is criticized because some neoplasms, such as nevi, are not progressive.

Clonality

Neoplastic tumors often contain more than one type of cell, but their initiation and continued growth is usually dependent on a single population of neoplastic cells. These cells are presumed to be clonal - that is, they are descended from a single progenitor cell.

Sometimes, the neoplastic cells all carry the same genetic or epigenetic anomaly which becomes evidence for clonality. For lymphoid neoplasms, e.g. lymphoma and leukemia, clonality is proven by the amplification of a single rearrangement of their immunoglobulin gene (for B cell lesions) or T-cell receptor gene (for T cell lesions). The demonstration of clonality is now considered to be necessary to identify a lymphoid cell proliferation as neoplastic.[4]

It is tempting to define neoplasms as clonal cellular proliferations but the demonstration of clonality is not always possible. Therefore, clonality is not required in the definition of neoplasia.

Neoplasia vs. tumor

Tumor (Latin for swelling, one of the cardinal signs of inflammation) originally meant any form of swelling, neoplastic or not. Current English, however, both medical and non-medical, uses tumor as a synonym of neoplasm.[5]

Some neoplasms do not form a tumor. These include leukemia and most forms of carcinoma in situ.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Cancer - Activity 1 - Glossary, page 4 of 5". http://science.education.nih.gov/supplements/nih1/cancer/other/glossary/act1-gloss4.htm. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
  2. ^ "What is neoplasm? Find the definition for neoplasm at WebMD". http://dictionary.webmd.com/terms/neoplasm.xml. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
  3. ^ Willis RA: The Spread of Tumors in the Human Body. London, Butterworth & Co, 1952
  4. ^ Lee ES, Locker J, Nalesnik M, et al. (1995). "The association of Epstein-Barr virus with smooth-muscle tumors occurring after organ transplantation". N. Engl. J. Med. 332 (1): 19–25. doi:10.1056/NEJM199501053320104. PMID 7990861. http://content.nejm.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=short&pmid=7990861&promo=ONFLNS19.
  5. ^ "Pancreas Cancer: Glossary of Terms". http://pathology.jhu.edu/pancreas/slides/glossary.html. Retrieved 2008-01-08.
· · Medicine: Pathology
Principles of pathology

Disease/Medical condition (Infection, Neoplasia) · Hemodynamics (Ischemia) · Inflammation · Wound healing

Cell death: Necrosis (Liquefactive necrosis, Coagulative necrosis, Caseous necrosis, Fat necrosis) · Apoptosis · Pyknosis · Karyorrhexis · Karyolysis

Cellular adaptation: Atrophy · Hypertrophy · Hyperplasia · Dysplasia · Metaplasia (Squamous, Glandular)

accumulations: pigment (Hemosiderin, Lipochrome/Lipofuscin, Melanin) · Steatosis
Anatomical pathology Surgical pathology · Cytopathology · Autopsy · Molecular pathology · Forensic pathology · Dental pathology Gross examination · Histopathology · Immunohistochemistry · Electron microscopy · Immunofluorescence · Fluorescent in situ hybridization
Clinical pathology Clinical chemistry · Hematopathology · Transfusion medicine · Medical microbiology · Diagnostic immunology · Immunopathology Enzyme assay · Mass spectrometry · Chromatography · Flow cytometry · Blood bank · Microbiological culture · Serology
Specific conditions Myocardial infarction
· · Pathology: Tumor, Neoplasm, Cancer, and Oncology (C00–D48, 140–239)
Conditions
Benign tumors Hyperplasia · Cyst · Pseudocyst · Hamartoma
Malignant progression Dysplasia · Carcinoma in situ · Cancer · Metastasis
Topography Head/Neck (Oral, Nasopharyngeal) · Digestive system · Respiratory system · Bone · Skin · Blood · Urogenital · Nervous system · Endocrine system
Histology Carcinoma · Sarcoma · Papilloma · Adenoma
Other Precancerous condition · Paraneoplastic syndrome
Staging/grading TNM · Ann Arbor · Prostate cancer staging · Gleason Grading System · Dukes classification
Carcinogenesis Cancer cell · Carcinogen · Tumor suppressor genes/oncogenes · Clonally transmissible cancer · Oncovirus · Cancer bacteria
Misc. Research · List of oncology-related terms

: NEO

,

, ,

drug (//)

· · Carcinogen - Cancer causing materials and agents
Main articles Cancer · Cancer cells
Major suspected carcinogens PFOA · Tobacco smoke · Xenoestrogen · Bisphenol A · Ionizing radiation · DDT · 1,3-Butadiene · List of breast carcinogenic substances · PAH
IARC International Agency for Research on Cancer / IARC agent lists: Group 1 · Group 2A · Group 2B · Group 3 · Group 4
See also: Neoplasm · Oncology · Non-stick pan

Categories: Anatomical pathology | Medical signs | Oncology

 

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Noun

Neoplasia Wikipedia neoplasia f. (plural neoplasie)
  1. neoplasia
Related terms
  • neoplasico

from: Wiktionary: neoplasia,
Sun Dec 11 12:45:09 2011