Search Results 221-230 of 23344 for Grow
The tumor can grow to invade and destroy healthy body tissue. In time, cancer cells can break away and spread to other parts of the body. When cancer spreads, ...
Pet dander can cause a long list of allergy symptoms, but most of them are fairly easy to treat. Dr. Anupama Ravi, a Mayo Clinic pediatric allergy specialist, ...
Microcysts may be seen during imaging tests, such as mammography or ultrasound, but are too small to feel. Macrocysts are large enough to be felt and can grow ...
A tubular adenoma becomes cancer only if its cells continue to grow and change over many years without being removed. The risk is very low once a polyp has ...
This noncancerous tumor can sometimes grow on a nerve in the head, causing hearing loss and balance problems ... growing or if it is growing slowly. Also ...
A cell's DNA holds the instructions that tell the cell what to do. In healthy cells, the DNA tells the cells to grow and multiply at a set rate. The DNA also ...
If the multiple myeloma is slow growing and isn't causing symptoms ... Healthy cells grow at a set pace and die at a set time. Cancer cells don't ...
It can happen if some cancer cells hide in the body and start growing again. Prostate cancer recurrence most often happens in the first five years after ...
Gliomas include tumors that range from low-grade, slow-growing tumors to high-grade, fast-growing tumors. ... Lower grade gliomas tend to grow more slowly, while ...
Mayo Clinic does not endorse companies or products. Advertising revenue supports our not-for-profit mission.
Check out these best-sellers and special offers on books and newsletters from Mayo Clinic Press.
Your gift to celebrate this day advances our doctors’ lifesaving work.