An acoustic neuroma, or vestibular schwannoma, is a common, non-cancerous type of tumor that grows on a nerve that runs between the brain and inner ear. Typically slow-growing, these tumors sometimes remain small enough that the best treatment is...
Breast cancer develops from the ducts or lobules that make up the breast glandular tissue or within the nipple. Breast lumps, whether benign or cancerous, may be detected during a physical self-examination, clinical exam or a mammogram. Following...
Trilogy is a radiation machine that offers multi-treatment functionality and image-guided technology in one machine. According to the Cancer Treatment Centers of America, the Trilogy system allows radiation oncologists to track the movement of a...
Lung cancer can form within the air sacs or airways of the lungs, leading to shortness of breath and difficulty breathing. If left undetected, the lung cancer eventually gains the ability to migrate out of the lungs, forming cancerous growths in...
The breasts are made up of a number of cell types that grow and develop in response to a number of hormones. Dysregulation of signalling in breast cells, or breast cell mutation, can lead to the development of tumors within the breast. Once a...
A brain tumor is an abnormal growth consisting of cells reproducing uncontrollably. A benign brain tumor is composed of harmless cells, and is contained within distinct boundaries. Most benign tumors can be removed surgically. Malignant tumors are...
Melanoma is a type of cancer which arises from genetic mutations within melanocytes, which are pigment-producing cells in the skin. Melanoma is often caused by excessive sunlight exposure. One of the dangers of melanoma is that it can spread to...
Radiation oncology is a cancer treatment that uses high energy X-rays to kill cancer cells. Radiation therapy can originate from a device similar to an X-ray machine. A doctor can also administer radiation therapy as an internal treatment by...
Spinal cord tumors are a type of cancer that can affect the central nervous system (CNS). An essential part of the CNS, spinal cord nerves control bodily movement. According to the Mayo Clinic, surgery is usually the first option in treating a...
An acoustic neuroma, also called a vestibular schwannoma, is a common non-cancerous brain tumor. It forms on the eighth cranial, or vestibulocochlear, nerve which relays information between the brain and inner ear. While an acoustic neuroma does...
Treatment for brain cancer depends on the type, the location of the tumor, size and stage of development. Patients can be afflicted with one of two types of brain cancer; primary brain cancer or secondary brain cancer, which is a metastasis of a...
Ringing in the ears, a symptom called tinnitus, occurs as a result of an underlying medical condition, such as ear trauma, structural abnormalities or growths in the ear. Although in most cases the underlying cause of tinnitus is not a serious...
Normal cells grow, divide and die all according to an intracellular program and in response to external signals. When cells transform into cancerous cells, they divide uncontrollably, do not die when they should, damage the surrounding normal...
Several types of neurological surgeries are used to treat medical conditions such as Parkinson's disease, mental health problems such as depression, and vascular problems such as blood clots and aneurysms. These surgeries use electrical...
A neuroma is a growth or tumor that arises from nerve tissue. It can occur at the end of an injured nerve fiber and is usually not malignant. Neuromas occur most frequently in the foot and ear. The most common neuroma in the foot is a Morton's...
The University of Maryland Medical Center notes that each year in the United States, acoustic neuromas affect 10 people out of every million. Also called a vestibular schwannoma, an acoustic neuroma forms on the nerve which connects the brain to...
A brain cyst is a noncancerous growth that contains tissue, blood, cerebrospinal fluid or minerals. The American Brain Tumor Association points out that brain cysts can cause problems if they are located in regions responsible for essential...
Gliomas arise from glial cells which make up the supporting tissues of the brain. According to the American Cancer Society, high grade malignant gliomas are the most common types of brain and spinal cord malignant tumors.
Treatment options for...
Prostate cancer develops in the prostate gland, a part of the male reproductive system. According to the National Cancer Institute, the disease develops primarily in older men and is the second most common cancer after skin cancer. Treatment for...
The National Cancer Institute estimates that in 2010, over 200,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer. They further state that a biopsy is the only way to be certain that cancer is present or not. This procedure involves the physical...
A diagnosis of breast cancer typically requires a biopsy in order to microscopically examine tissue for cancerous cells. There are several kinds of biopsies, and the type used can depend on the size of the lump, location, the number of suspicious...
You may or may not be a viable candidate for operative surgery. Only you and your physician can make that determination, based on the size, type and placement of the optic glioma as well as your age, medical history, physical condition and...
Brain cancer is a serious cancer that may not always be diagnosed properly. Brain cancer has symptoms, such as headaches and nausea, common to many conditions, many patients never undergo the proper diagnostic tests and receive treatment....
Glioma describes a type of brain tumor that originates in the glial cells in the brain --- those cells that do not carry nerve signals. Glial cells make up the supportive tissues in the brain, including the portion of the brain known as the...
An ependymoma is a tumor located in the cerebrospinal fluid-filled spaces of the brain and/or spinal cord. According to the Childhood Brain Tumor Foundation, ependymomas are rare but they're the third most common type of brain tumor found in...
A breast biopsy is a test performed by taking a sample of breast tissue from an area deemed suspicious by a doctor after he or she examines the results of a woman's mammogram. A pathologist then analyzes the sample, and determines whether the...
An acoustic neuroma refers to a noncancerous tumor that grows slowly and may or may not cause problems. According to the Mayo Clinic, symptoms of an acoustic neuroma include gradual hearing loss that may be sudden in some cases. It can also lead...
Acoustic neuroma is a slow growing, non-cancerous head tumor that develops next to the brain and attaches to the eighth cranial nerve that goes between the brain and the ear. For some with acoustic neuroma, the tumor never causes problems and, for...
Glioma tumors are a very fast moving form of brain cancer. The Glioma tumors are lethal tumors and can live on, even after surgery treatments, and then infect healthy brain tissue. These types of tumors are so aggressive that of the 20,000...
Brain tumors are created by abnormal and uncontrolled cell division. Learn about the symptoms and treatments for brain cancer in this video.