encyclopedia of medical concepts
ψ 
ψ 
ψ 

Neuroblastoma

More information in Books or onNLM PubMed
Definition: A common neoplasm of early childhood arising from neural crest cells in the sympathetic nervous system, and characterized by diverse clinical behavior, ranging from spontaneous remission to rapid metastatic progression and death. This tumor is the most common intraabdominal malignancy of childhood, but it may also arise from thorax, neck, or rarely occur in the central nervous system. Histologic features include uniform round cells with hyperchromatic nuclei arranged in nests and separated by fibrovascular septa. Neuroblastomas may be associated with the opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome. (From DeVita et al., Cancer: Principles and Practice of Oncology, 5th ed, pp2099-2101; Curr Opin Oncol 1998 Jan;10(1):43-51)  coord IM with precoord organ/neopl term (IM); for NEUROBLASTOMA, RETINAL see RETINOBLASTOMA   
Examples Esthesioneuroblastoma, Olfactory; Ganglioneuroblastoma
Other names Neuroblastomas
 
SubstanceCAS Registry & nameCategoriesSource
NAG protein, human  0   *Neoplasm Proteins Neuroblastoma. Oncogene 1999 Jan 7;18(1):233-8
ID3 protein, human  147785-34-0   *Neoplasm Proteins *Inhibitor of Differentiation Proteins Neuroblastoma Helix-Loop-Helix Motifs. EMBO J 1992 Jul;11(7):2563-71

To share this definition, click "text" (Facebook, Twitter) or "link" (blog, mail) then paste text link
Ads by Google

Sources: NLM Medical Subject Headings, NIH UMLS, Drugs@FDA, FDA AERS original data copyright United States Government. No endorsement implied. Last modified 6/6/2012

Warning: the drugs or drug combinations referred to here may be similar or related, but are not be the same ones and may not have the same pharmacological action as other substances described on the same page or in the same row. Please refer to product monograph or to your doctor
This website is accredited by Health On the Net Foundation. Click to verify.
We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health information: verify here.
About Reference.MD Privacy