Kidney tumour
Kidney tumour | |
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Micrograph of a renal oncocytoma, a type of benign kidney tumour. H&E stain. | |
Classification and external resources |
Kidney tumours (or kidney tumors), also known as renal tumours, are tumours, or growths, on or in the kidney. These growths can be benign or malignant (cancerous). They may be discovered on medical imaging incidentally (i.e. an incidentaloma), or may be present in patients as an abdominal mass, hematuria, abdominal pain, or manifest first in a paraneoplastic syndrome that seems unrelated to the kidney.[1]
Classification
There are many forms of kidney tumours:
Malignant (cancerous)
- The most frequent, malignant, primary kidney cancer is renal cell carcinoma (RCC) - which has several subtypes:
- Clear cell RCC.
- Papillary RCC
- Chromophobe RCC
- Collecting duct RCC
- Metastatic tumour, e.g. ovarian carcinoma.
Benign
References
- ↑ Gill IS, Aron M, Gervais DA, Jewett MA (February 2010). "Small renal mass". N. Engl. J. Med. 362 (7): 624–34. doi:10.1056/NEJMcp0910041. PMID 20164486.
External links
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