Metastatic Malignant Neoplasm To Brain: Disease Bioinformatics
A malignant metastatic neoplasm of the brain is a neoplasm (tumor) that occurs in the brain due to an abnormal growth or division of cells, or neoplasia. Malignant neoplasms are cancerous, aggressive, and grow very quickly. Brain cancers do not typically spread to other areas of the body, but the damage of the brain can affect functions all over the body. Causes of brain tumors are typically unknown, but some are related to an exposure to radiation or an inherited mutation on the TAG gene. Metastatic tumors originate in another part of the body and migrate to the brain, and they are the neoplasms with the worst prognosis. Possible treatments of malignant metastatic brain neoplasms include surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy, although the chance of a recurrence is very high.
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Metastatic Malignant Neoplasm To Brain is also known as Brain Metastases, Brain Metastasis, Brain Secondaries, Metastases To Brain, Metastasis To Brain.