Are fundal bulges more benign or malignant?

Gastric fundus elevation is more often malignant, but benign possibilities cannot be excluded, and the diagnosis needs to be made on the basis of pathology. When gastric fundus elevation is a benign lesion, gastric polyps and gastric mucosal edema due to gastric ulcers are mostly considered, but none of these are particularly common. Malignant gastric lesions mostly occur in the fundus of the stomach, and when malignant lesions are considered for fundal bulge, the edge of the bulge is red and swollen, the inside of the bulge is volcano-like rupture, the mucosa is stiffer, and the patient has obvious gastric pain, gastric acidity, nausea, black stools, emaciation, and other discomforts. Generally speaking, for gastric fundus elevation, it can only be guessed that malignant is more by experience, and it can not directly decide benign and malignant, and it needs to be combined with gastroscopic biopsy and judged according to the pathological results.