It's just a tumor not found in the uterus. The woman who has settled in her brain is very interesting. http://www.iflscience.com/…/twin-found-womans-brain
With its unique shape and appearance, it is one of the most memorable tumors while studying medicine. As you know, it is a mixed tumor. teeth, hair, epithelial tissue, intestinal wall, thyroid tissue. In some of the doctors I was exposed to in the summer, it was noticed that the man who thought he was pregnant had this tumor in his stomach. they had taken a picture of a pregnant man and acted as a gibbon. not nice of course. already doctors.
It comes from the ancient Greek root terato. It means monster. It means monster tumor with the suffix -oma, which is used in the nomenclature of benign tumors. this term was chosen because the morphological features of the tumor were monstrous. terms for a field can be used in a different sense from their origins. therefore, while examining a term etymologically, it would be more enlightening to evaluate the terminology field in the same parallel, in my opinion.
Oddly enough, it was the most terrifying of the tumors I've seen in my life, which we removed from an 85-year-old woman today in a 7-and-a-half-hour surgery (I couldn't get out even for a minute!!). I can't sleep because of the nausea because it doesn't go before my eyes. If we make a definition: a type of tumor that resembles normal derivatives of the three germ layers, develops in the capsule and forms its own tissue/organ parts. away from homes.
teratoma
teratoma
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teratoma
teratoma
Although it is disgusting, the probability of it happening to a newborn** is 0.0025%.
teratoma
It's just a tumor not found in the uterus. The woman who has settled in her brain is very interesting. http://www.iflscience.com/…/twin-found-womans-brain
teratoma
With its unique shape and appearance, it is one of the most memorable tumors while studying medicine. As you know, it is a mixed tumor. teeth, hair, epithelial tissue, intestinal wall, thyroid tissue. In some of the doctors I was exposed to in the summer, it was noticed that the man who thought he was pregnant had this tumor in his stomach. they had taken a picture of a pregnant man and acted as a gibbon. not nice of course. already doctors.
teratoma
tumor with a rather hideous appearance. hair, teeth, etc. in it... like a horror movie. God forbid anyone. amine.
teratoma
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/dermoid-cyst/symptoms-causes/syc-20374162
teratoma
It is a congenital tumor.
teratoma
It comes from the ancient Greek root terato. It means monster. It means monster tumor with the suffix -oma, which is used in the nomenclature of benign tumors. this term was chosen because the morphological features of the tumor were monstrous. terms for a field can be used in a different sense from their origins. therefore, while examining a term etymologically, it would be more enlightening to evaluate the terminology field in the same parallel, in my opinion.
teratoma
Oddly enough, it was the most terrifying of the tumors I've seen in my life, which we removed from an 85-year-old woman today in a 7-and-a-half-hour surgery (I couldn't get out even for a minute!!). I can't sleep because of the nausea because it doesn't go before my eyes. If we make a definition: a type of tumor that resembles normal derivatives of the three germ layers, develops in the capsule and forms its own tissue/organ parts. away from homes.