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visceral mcle tissue
Bichat
Gametophytic tissue
You are looking for the term extracellular matrix.
oedema
The medical term for sarcoma is "sarcoma." Sarcoma refers to a type of cancer that originates in the connective tissues of the body, such as bone, muscle, fat, or cartilage. Examples include osteosarcoma, liposarcoma, and chondrosarcoma.
The perioisteum is the connective tissue covering the bone.
Sarcoma (for examp. Langerhern Cell Sarcoma, Sarcoma of Ewing). addition! Reticulosarcoma (means sarcoma of the reticulocyte cells) A malignant tumor of connective tissue is called Sarcoma. There are three different subcategories: Hard Tissue Sarcomas (can occur in bone or cartilage), Soft Tissue Sarcomas (can occur in muscles, tendons, or lymphatic vessels) , and Liquid Tissue Sarcomas (can occur in blood and lymph)
Sarcoma
sarcoma
The term that means death and decay of soft tissue is "necrosis".
The paronychium is the soft tissue around the nail border.
cancer
There is no term listed as such. It is used in part of a description of a disease or condition. For example: Kaposi's sarcoma is a rare malignant lesion. Soft purple-brown nodule, associated with AIDS, diabetes, and malignant lymphoma.
Ewing's sarcoma is the one that typically affects children.
The overall chance of long-term survival with Ewing's sarcoma is currently about 60%. This is a composite figure. Survival is about 75% for patients with localized tumor (particularly if the tumor is located below the elbow or the midcalf) and about 25-30% with tumor that has spread. per http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=3346
A sarcoma (from the Greek 'sarx' meaning "flesh") is a general term describing a MalignantNeoplasm, or Cancer, that arises from transformed Connective_tissueCell_(biology).