Sunday 24 February 2013

cancer to cancer.

Cancer , cancer , cancer , cancer ... What is the difference between these terms? Are synonyms or there are distinctions to be made? In fact, it is not always easy to jump on this particular terminology, because, to be honest, not all authors agree in toto on the definition of each of them.However, since they are terms that are used almost daily by non-experts, we should try to do, as far as possible, a minimum of clarity on the subject. 
's start with the term, in our view, can be considered to be more "general"cancer . Cancer is a word derived from the Latin ( tumor , swelling, swelling) and that in medicine is used with meanings more or less specific, and usually it is used to indicate a disorder characterized by an abnormal growth of a tissue of the organism. We can roughly divide the tumors into two broad categories: benign and malignant tumors in this sense, synonymous with cancer is cancer (from the greek, new , new, and hyperplasia , training). The term carcinoma is considered by many authors in a more specific and, at present, but it was not so in the past, most of these uses it to refer to malignant tumors that originate from epithelial tissues; therefore is not a term that everyone uses in a general sense. It would not be correct to speak of, for example, cancer , referring to a sarcoma (a type of cancer that affects the connective tissue) or a glioma (a tumor that arises from the transformation of glial cells in the central nervous system).Finally, we come to the end cancer ; with cancer we refer generically to all malignancies and is in particular of cancer that we will deal with this our article.



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