EtymologyThe term is derived, via the Old French tumour, from the Latin tumor "swelling".[1] originally meant an abnormal swelling of the flesh. In contemporary English, tumor has evolved to become synonymous with solid neoplasm[2], all other forms of swelling being called swelling[3]. This tendency has also become common in medical literature. The noun tumefaction, derived from the adjective tumefied, is the current medical term for non-neoplastic tumors [4]. See also tumescence. Tumor is not precisely synonymous with cancer. A tumor can be benign (pre-malignant) or malignant, whereas cancer is by definition malignant. CauseA neoplasm is an abnormal proliferation of tissues. Where the cause is known, more often than not, a somatic mutation is involved. Most but not all neoplasms cause a tumor; those that do not cause tumors cause leukemias. Solid neoplasms (or tumors) may be benign or malignant (cancer). For some tumors, such as teratomas, the cancer status is ambiguous; benign or malignant is properly determined retrospectively, after some years of surveillance. Differential diagnoses of swellingsSwellings may have many causes other than what we now call tumors such as:
Other forms of swelling are part of the normal functions of the body and may or may not be included as causes of tumor. Examples include enlargement of the uterus in pregnancy and erection of the penis. References
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