Vascular tissue neoplasm
Vascular tissue neoplasm | |
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Specialty | Oncology |
A vascular tissue neoplasm is a tumor arising from endothelial cells,[1] the cells that line the wall of blood vessels and lymphatic vessels, as well as the heart.[2] Vascular tissue neoplasms is a group containing tumors with the same tissue origin; in other words, it denotes histological classification, rather than anatomic (i.e. where in the body the neoplasm is found) or clinical one. They can occur everywhere in the body where vessels are to be found.
Classification
Vascular tissue neoplasms, like neoplasms of all tissues, are classified to benign and malignant ones, according to their biological behavior.[1]
Benign vascular tumors
Malignant vascular tumors
Most malignant vascular tumors are considered sarcomas,[3] a major histological group of tumors, arising from transformed cells of mesenchymal origin.
References
- ^ a b Wen, Victoria W.; MacKenzie, Karen L. (September 2013). "Modeling human endothelial cell transformation in vascular neoplasias". Disease Models & Mechanisms. 6 (5): 1066–1079. doi:10.1242/dmm.012674.
- ^ Betts, J. Gordon (2013). Anatomy & physiology. ISBN 1938168135. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
- ^ Casciato, Dennis A., Miscellaneous neoplasms, in: Casciato D.A. (ed), Manual of clinical oncology, Lippincot Williams and Wilkins 2009, p. 410