metastasis
Psychology
Physiology
Examples of metastasis in the following topics:
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Metastasis Through Lymphatic Vessels
- Metastasis is the spread of a disease from one organ or part to another non-adjacent organ or area of the body.
- The newly formed "daughter" tumor in the adjacent site within the tissue is called a local metastasis.
- This is the most common route of metastasis for carcinomas.
- This is the most common route of metastasis for carcinomas.
- Micrograph of a colorectal adenocarcinoma metastasis to a lymph node, also lymph node metastasis.
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Brain Tumors
- Brain metastasis in the right cerebral hemisphere from lung cancer shown on T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging with intravenous contrast.
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Specific Effects of Stress: Cancer
- Studies in mice and human cancer cells grown in a laboratory have found that the stress hormone norepinephrine, part of the body's fight-or-flight response system, may promote angiogenesis and metastasis.
- Metastasis refers to the transference of a bodily function or disease to another part of the body, specifically the development of a secondary area of disease remote from the original site.
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Laryngitis and Cancer of the Larynx
- Laryngeal cancer may spread by direct extension to adjacent structures, by metastasis to regional cervical lymph nodes, or more distantly, through the blood stream.
- Distant metastasis to the lung are most common.
- The final management plan will depend on the site, stage (tumor size, nodal spread, distant metastasis), and histological type.
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Overview of Cancer
- A major hallmark of cancers is metastasis, the ability of the cancer to spread between tissues and organs within the body.
- Additionally, symptoms associated with metastasis—such as enlarged lymph nodes, an enlarged liver, or an enlarged spleen—can develop.
- Describe the primary characteristics of cancer including signs and symptoms, metastasis, classification, causes, prevention, and treatments
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Cell Migration in Multicellular Organisms
- Errors during this process have serious consequences, including intellectual disability, vascular disease, tumor formation and metastasis.
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Cell Signaling and Cell Growth
- If left unchecked, uncontrolled cell division can lead tumor formation and metastasis, the growth of cancer cells in new locations in the body.
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How the Body Responds to Stress
- Studies in mice and human cancer cells grown in a laboratory have found that the stress hormone norepinephrine may promote angiogenesis and metastasis.
- "Metastasis" refers to the transference of a bodily function or disease to another part of the body, specifically the development of a secondary area of disease remote from the original site.
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Pancreatic Cancer
- Symptoms of pancreatic cancer metastasis.
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Lung Cancer
- If left untreated, this growth can spread beyond the lung in a process called metastasis into nearby tissue and eventually into other parts of the body.