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Encyclopedia > Fibroma
Soft Fibroma (fibroma molle).
Soft Fibroma (fibroma molle).

Fibromas (or fibroid tumors or fibroids) are benign tumors that are composed of fibrous or connective tissue. They can grow in all organs, arising from mesenchyme tissue. Download high resolution version (1024x768, 114 KB) Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Download high resolution version (1024x768, 114 KB) Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Benign can refer to any medical condition which, untreated or with symptomatic therapy, will not become life-threatening. ... Tumor or tumour literally means swelling, and is sometimes still used with that meaning. ... Connective tissue is one of the four types of tissue in traditional classifications (the others being epithelial, muscle, and nervous tissue. ... Mesenchyme (also known as embryonic connective tissue) is the mass of tissue that develops mainly from the mesoderm (the middle layer of the trilaminar germ disc) of an embryo. ...


The term "fibroblastic" or "fibromatous" is used to describe tumors of the fibrous connective tissue. When the term fibroma is used without modifier, it is usually considered benign, with the term fibrosarcoma reserved for malignant tumors. Mouse Embryonic Fibroblasts (MEF) A fibroblast is a type of cell that synthesizes and maintains the extracellular matrix of many animal tissues. ... ... Benign can refer to any medical condition which, untreated or with symptomatic therapy, will not become life-threatening. ... Fibrosarcoma (fibroblastic sarcoma) is a malignant tumor derived from fibrous connective tissue and characterized by immature proliferating fibroblasts or undifferentiated anaplastic spindle cells. ... In medicine, malignant is a clinical term that is used to describe a clinical course that progresses rapidly to death. ...


The term fibroid can also refer to tumors of smooth muscle, as in uterine fibroids. A leiomyoma (plural is leiomyomata) is a benign smooth muscle neoplasm that is not premalignant. ... Cultured Smooth muscle of the aorta. ... Uterine fibroids (leiomyomata, singular leiomyoma) are the most common neoplasm in females, and may affect about 25 % of white and 50% of black women during the reproductive years. ...

Contents

Hard Fibroma

The hard fibroma (fibroma durum) consists of many fibres and few cells, e.g. in skin it is called dermatofibroma (fibroma simplex or nodulus cutaneous), in skin there also might be histiocytomas, which contain more cells. A special form is the keloid, which derives from hyperplastic growth of scars. Dermatofibromas are harmless benign skin growths, found especially on the legs, that range in size from about 0. ... This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject. ... A scar results from the biologic process of wound repair in the skin and other tissues of the body. ...


Soft Fibroma

The soft fibroma (fibroma molle) or fibroma with a shaft (acrochordon, skin tag, fibroma pendulans) consist of many loosely connected cells and less fibroid tissue. It mostly appears at the neck, armpits or groins. The photo shows a soft fibroma of the eyelid.


Other Types of Fibroma

The fibroma cavernosum or angiofibroma, consists of many often dilated vessels, it is a vasoactive tumor occurring almost exclusively in adolescent males.


The cystic fibroma (fibroma cysticum) has central softening or dilated lymphatic vessels. In mammals including humans, the lymphatic vessels (or lymphatics) are a network of thin tubes that branch, like blood vessels, into tissues throughout the body. ...


The myxofibroma (fibroma myxomatodes) is produced by liquefaction of the underlying soft tissue. In medicine, the term soft tissue refers to tissues that connect, support, or surround other structures and organs of the body. ...


The cemento-ossifying fibroma is hard and fibrous, most frequently seen in the jaw or mouth, sometimes in connection with a fracture or another type of injury. Human jaw front view Human jaw left view Human jaw top view The jaw is either of the two opposable structures forming, or near the entrance to, the mouth. ... It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with mouth (human). ... For fractures in geologic formations, see Rock fracture. ... Injury is damage or harm caused to the structure or function of the body caused by an outside agent or force, which may be physical or chemical. ...


Other fibromas: chondromyxoid fibroma, desmoplasmic fibroma, nonossifying fibroma, ossifying fibroma, perifollicular fibroma, pleomorphic fibroma etc.



Ovarian Fibroma


It appears in the sex cord-stromal tumour group of ovarian neoplasms. Ovary fibromas are most frequent during middle age, and rare in children. Upon gross pathological inspection, ovary fibromas are firm and white or tan. Variants with edema are especially likely to be associated with Meig's syndrome. On microscopic examination, there are intersecting bundles of spindle cells producing collagen. There may be thecomatous areas (fibrothecoma). Sex cord-stromal tumours are a group of sex cord ovarian neoplasms which accounts for 8% of all reported cases. ... Middle age is a non-specific stage in life when a person is neither young nor old, but somewhere in between. ... A male Caucasian toddler child A child (plural: children) is a young human. ... Pathology (from Greek pathos, feeling, pain, suffering; and logos, study of; see also -ology) is the study of the processes underlying disease and other forms of illness, harmful abnormality, or dysfunction. ... Edema (American English) or oedema (British English), formerly known as dropsy or hydropsy, is swelling of any organ or tissue due to accumulation of excess lymph fluid, without an increase of the number of cells in the affected tissue. ... Meigs syndrome is the triad of ovarian fibroma (a benign tumor of the ovary), ascites, and right hydrothorax, first described in 1936 by Meigs and Cass. ... Robert Hookes microscope (1665) - an engineered device used to study living systems. ... Spindle neurons are a specific class of neurons that participate in signal transmission in the nervous system, and are characterized by a large spindle shaped soma, gradually tapering into a single apical dendrite (axon) in one direction, with only a single dendrite facing opposite. ... Tropocollagen triple helix. ... Thecomas are benign ovarian neoplasms that are sex cord-stromal tumours. ...


Treatment

Outcomes

See also

Peripheral ossifying fibroma is an oral pathologic condition that appears in the mouth as an overgrowth of gingival tissue due to irritation or trauma. ...

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Fibroma - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (487 words)
Fibromas (or fibroid tumors or fibroids) are benign tumors that are composed of fibrous or connective tissue.
The myxofibroma (fibroma myxomatodes) is produced by liquefaction of the underlying soft tissue.
The cemento-ossifying fibroma is hard and fibrous, most frequently seen in the jaw or mouth, sometimes in connection with a fracture or another type of injury.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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