A tumor that grows in only one part of the body is typically referred to as a localized tumor. These tumors can be benign or malignant and are confined to a specific area without spreading to other tissues or organs. Examples include certain types of sarcomas or adenomas, which arise in specific tissues like muscle or glandular tissue, respectively. Localized tumors may require surgical removal, depending on their type and impact on surrounding structures.
benign
Cell division is not regulated in tumor cells.
The nose and ears are the only parts of the human body that continue to grow throughout a person's life.
The only organ of the human body that does not grow from the day we are born is the eyeball. At birth, the size of the eyeball is already about 75-80% of its adult size, and it remains relatively the same throughout life.
The only organ in the human body that continues to grow until death is the ear. This is because the bone surrounding the inner ear continuously grows throughout a person's life.
benign
on the side of your tummy
benign
pupils
benign
i think what you mean is a benign tumor, which is a type of tumor that does not spread to other parts of the body i think what you mean here is a benign tumor, which is a type of tumor that does not spread to other bodily part and is only localised to one spot. it is usually not a big concern
benign
It starts as one cell, and grows into a mass of cells that do not stop replicating (this is the growth of a tumor). Tumors can either be malignant or benign. A tumor is defined as "an abnormal new mass of tissue that serves no purpose" by the Princeton WordNet.
The brain tumor I had was in the center of my brain. It was located just under the optic chiasm. It was a schwannoma brain tumor which only grows on nerves. It was growing off of my optic nerve. The craniotomy removed it, unfortunately there was nerve damage. I cannot open my left eye, which in a way is good, because my eye points all the way to the outer corner. Thank God the tumor was not cancerous.
When a tumor has not metastasized, it is growing in only one location. A tumor that has metastasized becomes many tumors growing in many locations, and furthermore, this is a continuing process by which the cancer takes over more and more of the body.
the question is not specific. but yes you can get disease after a fracture
Surgery is the only way to remove the tumor