Biology, asked by hemanthm77, 8 months ago

How is Carcinoma different from sarcoma?

Answers

Answered by Kausmitachakrabarti
2

Answer:

A carcinoma forms in the skin or tissue cells that line the body's internal organs, such as the kidneys and liver. A sarcoma grows in the body's connective tissue cells, which include fat, blood vessels, nerves, bones, muscles, deep skin tissues and cartilage.

Explanation:

Hope it will help you!..............

Answered by risky2k46
0

Answer:

A CARCINOMA forms in the skin or tissue cells that line the body's internal organs, such as the kidneys and liver. A sarcoma grows in the body's connective tissue cells, which include fat, blood vessels, nerves, bones, muscles, deep skin tissues and cartilage

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