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单词 malignancy
释义

Definition of malignancy in English:

malignancy

nounPlural malignancies məˈlɪɡnənsiməˈlɪɡnənsi
mass noun
  • 1The state or presence of a malignant tumour; cancer.

    after biopsy, evidence of malignancy was found
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The patient's history of smoking and the initial presentation of malignancy in the lung are compatible with a lung primary.
    • She has no evidence of malignancy, inflammatory disease, hemorrhage, or chronic infection.
    • A 66-year-old woman with no previous history of malignancy presented with melena.
    • In these cases, the presence of distant metastasis was a clear sign of malignancy.
    • There was no evidence of dysplasia or malignancy.
    • We found no evidence of malignancy, but dysplastic changes were present in the glandular cells.
    • Presumptive diagnoses ranged from a malignant pleural tumor to malignancy occupying the complete lower lobe.
    • Meningitis as a presenting symptom of malignancy would be extremely rare.
    • Always consider esophageal malignancy when dysphagia is present.
    • The systemic features of both entities can mimic occult infection, malignancy, multiple myeloma and connective tissue disease.
    • A relatively important, yet underemphasized criterion of malignancy in prostate cancer is the presence of nucleomegaly.
    • Tumours of high malignancy will sometimes have spread widely before they are diagnosed.
    • Poor prognostic indicators include poorly responsive disease, delay in diagnosis and the presence of malignancy.
    • A previous fine needle aspirate of the thyroid had revealed atypical follicular cells but no obvious evidence of malignancy.
    • Cytoplasmic vacuolization in this setting should not be considered evidence of malignancy in men with gynecomastia.
    • Examination of cells under the microscope to identify the presence of malignancy.
    • ‘Current patients with a diagnosis of malignancy will be admitted at the discretion of medical staff,’ the hospital stated.
    • Infections must be treated aggressively, and surveillance for unusual infections, malignancy, or autoimmune disease is critical.
    • Kaposi's sarcoma is the most common skin malignancy associated with HIV infection.
    • A whole-body bone scan showed no evidence of bony metastases, and a mammogram showed no evidence of malignancy.
    1. 1.1count noun A cancerous growth.
      a malignancy had been removed from the left ventricle
      Example sentencesExamples
      • None of the patients had endometrial hyperplasia or an underlying malignancy.
      • The patient had no history of a concurrent or subsequent ovarian or pancreatic carcinoma or an invasive malignancy at any site.
      • The examination revealed a cancerous tumour, and a biopsy revealed a malignancy.
      • In contrast, tumor cells don't know when to die, thereby exacerbating the uncontrolled growth of malignancies.
      • Patients with the syndrome should be screened for an underlying malignancy or autoimmune disorder.
      • The cure rate for Hodgkin's disease is high but there is a risk of developing secondary malignancies.
      • Tubular adenomas account for 75% of adenomas but comprise only 5% of malignancies.
      • Helicobacter pylori infection has been associated with the pathogenesis of peptic ulcer disease and gastric malignancies.
      • Alterations in the expression of retinoid receptors are implicated in human malignancies.
      • When the mutation occurs in a cell, it essentially takes the brakes off the cell's growth, causing a malignancy.
      • The test comes down to giving them varying doses of a mutagen or carcinogen and observing whether malignancies develop.
      • Dr. Folkers began to raise money to pursue his dream of using CoQ10 to treat malignancies.
      • Solid malignancies and nonhematologic diseases were classified as high risk.
      • The tumour cells in these malignancies and not the adjacent normal tissues have the evidence of the virus DNA and the virus proteins.
      • All donors were screened for malignancies, autoimmune and certain neurological disorders, and any high-risk behavior.
      • Each successive classification of salivary neoplasia holds space for malignancies that defy these classification schemata.
      • Second nonocular malignancies develop with increased incidence in patients with hereditary retinoblastoma.
      • There were 18 solid tumors, 11 hematologic malignancies, and 2 of unknown primary.
      • Can prolonged administration of endothelial antiapoptotic agents influence the growth of malignancies?
      • Alternatively, infiltrating microglia near a focus of radiation necrosis may be mistaken for a malignancy in a treated glioma.
    2. 1.2count noun A form of cancer.
      diffuse malignancies such as leukaemia
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The most urgent diagnosis is retinoblastoma, a malignancy most likely arising from retinal germ cells.
      • Ewing's sarcoma is a childhood malignancy of bone and soft tissue.
      • In its biologic behavior, desmoplastic fibroma is probably closer to low-grade malignancies than to usual benign lesions of bone.
      • Carcinoma of the larynx is a rare malignancy in the paediatric age group.
      • The most common clinical presentation of urachal malignancy is hematuria, especially in carcinomas.
      • One half of these malignancies are rhabdomyosarcomas originating in striated muscle.
      • We included patients with multiple myeloma but excluded other haematological malignancies.
      • High-grade soft tissue sarcomas are a group of malignancies that often affect otherwise healthy young people.
      • Conversely, up to 5% of gastric malignancies are lymphomas.
      • With all immunosuppressive treatment regimens, there is an increased rate of malignancies, especially lymphomas.
      • The commonest malignancies are basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and melanoma.
      • These findings are especially critical because it is important to distinguish fibroadenoma from malignancies.
      • A child with this malignancy can present acutely with severe dyspnea and, occasionally, superior vena cava syndrome.
      • Melanoma affects a younger patient population than many malignancies.
      • Among the neoplastic lesions, both primary and metastatic malignancies must be considered.
      • And since this group of malignancies primarily affects elderly patients, such a procedure is particularly arduous and sometimes impossible.
      • Patients with this malignancy most often present with a cervical mass from metastatic spread to a lymph node.
      • Breast carcinoma is one of the most common malignancies among women worldwide.
      • Squamous cell carcinoma and tumors of lymphoid tissue are the main malignancies of the pharynx.
      • Similarly, workup of the bone marrow for lymphoma and plasma cell malignancies is aided by immunophenotyping.
      • Additionally, atypical lipomas were considered as malignancies.
  • 2The quality of being malign.

    her eyes sparkled with renewed malignancy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • We know we harbor the same malignancy and malice, the same greed and injustice that we detest in others.
    • By the very nature of what it is, Empires are malignant, not benign though they cloak this malignancy with shallow kindness.
    • I get angry, but I don't hate because hate causes malignancy in me, not the person I'm hating.
    Synonyms
    rancour, malevolence, vitriol, spite, spitefulness, vindictiveness, malice, maliciousness, malignity, viciousness, nastiness, ill will, ill feeling, animosity, animus, acrimony, acrimoniousness, bitterness, embitterment, embitteredness, sourness, resentment, grudgingness, virulence, antagonism, hostility, bad blood, bile, spleen, gall, enmity, hate, hatred, dislike, antipathy, aversion

Rhymes

benignancy
 
 

Definition of malignancy in US English:

malignancy

nounməˈliɡnənsēməˈlɪɡnənsi
  • 1The state or presence of a malignant tumor; cancer.

    after biopsy, evidence of malignancy was found
    Example sentencesExamples
    • ‘Current patients with a diagnosis of malignancy will be admitted at the discretion of medical staff,’ the hospital stated.
    • In these cases, the presence of distant metastasis was a clear sign of malignancy.
    • Infections must be treated aggressively, and surveillance for unusual infections, malignancy, or autoimmune disease is critical.
    • Kaposi's sarcoma is the most common skin malignancy associated with HIV infection.
    • There was no evidence of dysplasia or malignancy.
    • A previous fine needle aspirate of the thyroid had revealed atypical follicular cells but no obvious evidence of malignancy.
    • The patient's history of smoking and the initial presentation of malignancy in the lung are compatible with a lung primary.
    • The systemic features of both entities can mimic occult infection, malignancy, multiple myeloma and connective tissue disease.
    • Always consider esophageal malignancy when dysphagia is present.
    • Meningitis as a presenting symptom of malignancy would be extremely rare.
    • Examination of cells under the microscope to identify the presence of malignancy.
    • We found no evidence of malignancy, but dysplastic changes were present in the glandular cells.
    • She has no evidence of malignancy, inflammatory disease, hemorrhage, or chronic infection.
    • A 66-year-old woman with no previous history of malignancy presented with melena.
    • A whole-body bone scan showed no evidence of bony metastases, and a mammogram showed no evidence of malignancy.
    • Presumptive diagnoses ranged from a malignant pleural tumor to malignancy occupying the complete lower lobe.
    • A relatively important, yet underemphasized criterion of malignancy in prostate cancer is the presence of nucleomegaly.
    • Poor prognostic indicators include poorly responsive disease, delay in diagnosis and the presence of malignancy.
    • Tumours of high malignancy will sometimes have spread widely before they are diagnosed.
    • Cytoplasmic vacuolization in this setting should not be considered evidence of malignancy in men with gynecomastia.
    1. 1.1 A cancerous growth.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The tumour cells in these malignancies and not the adjacent normal tissues have the evidence of the virus DNA and the virus proteins.
      • Helicobacter pylori infection has been associated with the pathogenesis of peptic ulcer disease and gastric malignancies.
      • Dr. Folkers began to raise money to pursue his dream of using CoQ10 to treat malignancies.
      • All donors were screened for malignancies, autoimmune and certain neurological disorders, and any high-risk behavior.
      • When the mutation occurs in a cell, it essentially takes the brakes off the cell's growth, causing a malignancy.
      • Second nonocular malignancies develop with increased incidence in patients with hereditary retinoblastoma.
      • Can prolonged administration of endothelial antiapoptotic agents influence the growth of malignancies?
      • The cure rate for Hodgkin's disease is high but there is a risk of developing secondary malignancies.
      • Alternatively, infiltrating microglia near a focus of radiation necrosis may be mistaken for a malignancy in a treated glioma.
      • The test comes down to giving them varying doses of a mutagen or carcinogen and observing whether malignancies develop.
      • The examination revealed a cancerous tumour, and a biopsy revealed a malignancy.
      • Each successive classification of salivary neoplasia holds space for malignancies that defy these classification schemata.
      • Patients with the syndrome should be screened for an underlying malignancy or autoimmune disorder.
      • None of the patients had endometrial hyperplasia or an underlying malignancy.
      • Tubular adenomas account for 75% of adenomas but comprise only 5% of malignancies.
      • Alterations in the expression of retinoid receptors are implicated in human malignancies.
      • In contrast, tumor cells don't know when to die, thereby exacerbating the uncontrolled growth of malignancies.
      • The patient had no history of a concurrent or subsequent ovarian or pancreatic carcinoma or an invasive malignancy at any site.
      • There were 18 solid tumors, 11 hematologic malignancies, and 2 of unknown primary.
      • Solid malignancies and nonhematologic diseases were classified as high risk.
    2. 1.2 A form of cancer.
      diffuse malignancies such as leukemia
      Example sentencesExamples
      • And since this group of malignancies primarily affects elderly patients, such a procedure is particularly arduous and sometimes impossible.
      • Ewing's sarcoma is a childhood malignancy of bone and soft tissue.
      • The commonest malignancies are basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, and melanoma.
      • Patients with this malignancy most often present with a cervical mass from metastatic spread to a lymph node.
      • Squamous cell carcinoma and tumors of lymphoid tissue are the main malignancies of the pharynx.
      • One half of these malignancies are rhabdomyosarcomas originating in striated muscle.
      • Conversely, up to 5% of gastric malignancies are lymphomas.
      • In its biologic behavior, desmoplastic fibroma is probably closer to low-grade malignancies than to usual benign lesions of bone.
      • Melanoma affects a younger patient population than many malignancies.
      • Additionally, atypical lipomas were considered as malignancies.
      • We included patients with multiple myeloma but excluded other haematological malignancies.
      • Breast carcinoma is one of the most common malignancies among women worldwide.
      • These findings are especially critical because it is important to distinguish fibroadenoma from malignancies.
      • Similarly, workup of the bone marrow for lymphoma and plasma cell malignancies is aided by immunophenotyping.
      • The most common clinical presentation of urachal malignancy is hematuria, especially in carcinomas.
      • Among the neoplastic lesions, both primary and metastatic malignancies must be considered.
      • Carcinoma of the larynx is a rare malignancy in the paediatric age group.
      • With all immunosuppressive treatment regimens, there is an increased rate of malignancies, especially lymphomas.
      • The most urgent diagnosis is retinoblastoma, a malignancy most likely arising from retinal germ cells.
      • A child with this malignancy can present acutely with severe dyspnea and, occasionally, superior vena cava syndrome.
      • High-grade soft tissue sarcomas are a group of malignancies that often affect otherwise healthy young people.
  • 2The quality of being malign or malevolent.

    her eyes sparkled with renewed malignancy
    Example sentencesExamples
    • By the very nature of what it is, Empires are malignant, not benign though they cloak this malignancy with shallow kindness.
    • I get angry, but I don't hate because hate causes malignancy in me, not the person I'm hating.
    • We know we harbor the same malignancy and malice, the same greed and injustice that we detest in others.
    Synonyms
    rancour, malevolence, vitriol, spite, spitefulness, vindictiveness, malice, maliciousness, malignity, viciousness, nastiness, ill will, ill feeling, animosity, animus, acrimony, acrimoniousness, bitterness, embitterment, embitteredness, sourness, resentment, grudgingness, virulence, antagonism, hostility, bad blood, bile, spleen, gall, enmity, hate, hatred, dislike, antipathy, aversion
 
 
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更新时间:2024/11/11 1:44:29