Benign

Usually not threatening to health or life; not malignant.


Not cancerous; does not invade nearby tissue or spread to other parts of the body.


A neoplasm that grows very slowly.


Mild, noncancerous, and/or not spreading (compare malignant), as of a disease or growth, especially a benign tumor.


A term that describes a condition that is not malignant (cancerous), invasive, or recurrent and does not metastasize (or spread). A benign tumor is one that is not cancerous.


Describing a tumor that does not invade and destroy the tissue in which it originates or spread to distant sites in the body, i.e. a tumor that is not cancerous.


This term, which literally means “harmless,” commonly refers to tumors that are not cancerous (malignant).


Benign tumors are lumps of cells that are usually nonthreatening and seldom cause death. They usually resemble surrounding tissue; remain localized; and spread by expansion, similar to a wart or mole. They do not spread to other parts of the body.


Noncancerous. Benign tumors do not spread to tissues around them or to other parts of the body.


Encounter a term employed to characterize a medical condition that holds minimal threat to one’s health. When utilized in the context of tumors, “benign” denotes noncancerous growths that lack the capacity to infiltrate or damage surrounding tissues and are incapable of spreading to other locations within the body. This distinction highlights the relatively harmless nature of such tumors, providing reassurance regarding their impact on overall well-being.


 


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