The answer to this question should come from a physician.
A malignant tumour means that it is a tumour which has cancer
That is the UK spelling (e.g. cancer) - "tumour". The preferred US spelling is "tumor".
growth, tumour, malignancy
skin tumour/cancer
A brain tumour is a form of cancer. Epilepsy is not a cancer. A tumour can actually cause a seizure. A seizure could be one symptom of a tumour. However, this is a cause only in a very small amount of people who have epilepsy.
1. Benign tumour 2. Malignant tumour (cancer) 3. Due to another reason
yes it helps on spread of tumour in some cases such as testicular tumour
The word 'renal' refers to the kidneys, so renal cancer would be a tumour which has started in the kidneys.
Benign means that it isn't cancer. It can still be dangerous if it is pressing on something or gets too big.
Type your answer here... giant cell tumour on little finger if removed is that the end of it and not cancer
Metastacized. The tumor cells spread to other locations in the body. Is that what you were asking?
Cancer are cells that do not limit their self-division. It is this flagrant growth that forms a tumour. The cancer cells are interconnected with benign cells in the same way that the benign cells connect with each other.