Dysplasia Cells

Dysplasia Cells that look abnormal under a microscope but are not cancer. Normal cells may become cancer cells. Before cancer cells form in tissues of the body, the cells go through abnormal changes called hyperplasia and dysplasia. In hyperplasia, there is an increase in the number of cells in an organ or tissue that appear normal under a microscope. In dysplasia, the cells look abnormal under a microscope but are not cancer. Hyperplasia and dysplasia may or may not become cancer. The terms hip dysplasia, fibrous dysplasia, and renal dysplasia refer to an abnormal development, at macroscopic or microscopical level. Myelodysplastic syndromes, or dysplasia of blood-forming cells, show increased numbers of immature cells in the bone marrow, and a decrease in mature, functional cells in the blood

For More: http://www.sciaeon.org/cancer-biology-and-clinical-oncology/home  

Manuscript Submission: http://www.sciaeon.org/submit-paper   

Contact: cancerbiology@sciaeonopenaccess.com

Leave a comment