MAMMARY - meaning and definition. What is MAMMARY
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What (who) is MAMMARY - definition

Mammary gland tumor; Dog mammary tumor; Canine mammary tumor; Cat mammary tumor; Feline mammary tumor; Mammary tumors; Mammary neoplasms, animal; Mammary tumour; Mammary cancer; Mammary cyst
  • Emaciated]] female dog with a 9-month-old mammary tumor.
  • The same, closer
  • Radiograph]] (x-ray) of an affected dog. The metastases cause the dog difficulty in breathing.
  • A mammary tumor in a rat.

mammary      
['mam?ri]
¦ adjective denoting or relating to the human female breasts or the milk-secreting organs of other mammals.
¦ noun (plural mammaries) informal a breast.
Origin
C17: from mamma2 + -ary1.
Mammary      
·adj Of or pertaining to the mammae or breasts; as, the mammary arteries and veins.
mammary      
Mammary means relating to the breasts. (TECHNICAL)
...the mammary glands.
ADJ: ADJ n

Wikipedia

Mammary tumor

A mammary tumor is a neoplasm originating in the mammary gland. It is a common finding in older female dogs and cats that are not spayed, but they are found in other animals as well. The mammary glands in dogs and cats are associated with their nipples and extend from the underside of the chest to the groin on both sides of the midline. There are many differences between mammary tumors in animals and breast cancer in humans, including tumor type, malignancy, and treatment options. The prevalence in dogs is about three times that of women. In dogs, mammary tumors are the second most common tumor (after skin tumors) over all and the most common tumor in female dogs with a reported incidence of 3.4%. Multiple studies have documented that spaying female dogs when young greatly decreases their risk of developing mammary neoplasia when aged. Compared with female dogs left intact, those spayed before puberty have 0.5% of the risk, those spayed after one estrous cycle have 8.0% of the risk, and dogs spayed after two estrous cycles have 26.0% of the risk of developing mammary neoplasia later in life. Overall, unspayed female dogs have a seven times greater risk of developing mammary neoplasia than do those that are spayed. While the benefit of spaying decreases with each estrous cycle, some benefit has been demonstrated in female dogs even up to 9 years of age. There is a much lower risk (about 1 percent) in male dogs and a risk in cats about half that of dogs.

Examples of use of MAMMARY
1. The chemical altered the genetic make–up of cells in the young female rat‘s mammary glands.
2. Mammary woes No one can identify the gel Russian doctors used in breast implants in the 1''0s. .
3. While only females have mammary glands, we all start out in a similar way in the embryo, the authors explain.
4. In Australia, researchers are studying a human virus similar to one called MMTV which is responsible for mammary tumours in mice.
5. Professor Alan Ashworth and his team had wanted to understand the trigger for breast development, including what controls the number of mammary glands.