Results 311 to 320 of about 1,634,200 (363)
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Spinal Hemangiomas

Neurosurgery, 1983
Abstract Three new cases of spinal cord compression due to vertebral hemangioma are reported. The clinical presentation, with spinal pain, radicular radiation, and paraparesis, is similar to that of primary lymphoma, metastatic tumor, and disc disease. If the characteristic plain film changes of vertical trabeculations and striations are
M, Healy, D A, Herz, L, Pearl
openaire   +2 more sources

Spinal anaesthesia for spinal surgery

Best Practice & Research Clinical Anaesthesiology, 2003
Spinal anaesthesia for spinal surgery is becoming increasingly more popular because this anaesthetic technique allows the patient to self-position and avoid neurological injury that may occur with prone positioning under general anaesthesia. Spinal anaesthesia reduces intraoperative surgical blood loss, improves perioperative haemodynamic stability and
W Scott, Jellish, John F, Shea
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Spinal and spinal cord infection

European Radiology Supplements, 2004
This review article includes infections of the vertebral body, intervertebral disc, ligaments and paravertebral soft tissues, epidural space, meninges and subarachnoid space, and the spinal cord. A wide range of infective organisms may be implicated and the incidence of some, notably tuberculosis, is rising due to increased immunocompromise and other ...
Balériaux, Danielle, Neugroschl, Carine
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Spinal Trauma

Neuroimaging Clinics of North America, 2007
Approximately 30,000 spinal injuries occur in the United States every year. Injuries to the spine and its contents affect predominately young, healthy individuals and are a major cause of disability, with significant socioeconomic consequences. The main cause for spinal injuries is blunt trauma, most commonly caused by motor vehicle accidents, followed
Pia C, Sundgren   +2 more
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Spinal pain

European Journal of Radiology, 2015
The spinal pain, and expecially the low back pain (LBP), represents the second cause for a medical consultation in primary care setting and a leading cause of disability worldwide [1]. LBP is more often idiopathic. It has as most frequent cause the internal disc disruption (IDD) and is referred to as discogenic pain.
R, Izzo   +3 more
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Spinal Biomechanics

Journal of Biomechanical Engineering, 1993
The lumbar spine is a source of disability due to low back pain (LBP), yet the precise diagnosis is unknown in 80-90 percent of patients. The lifetime prevalence is 75 percent with a cost to the U.S. economy as high as 80 billion dollars. The problem is partly caused by mechanical overloading of the tissues and thus, there is some potential for both ...
M H, Pope, J E, Novotny
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Spinal Infections

Neuroimaging Clinics of North America, 2023
Spinal cord infections can present with a wide variety of imaging findings, depending on the pathogen and the host's immune status. Infectious myelitis can have a characteristic distribution of lesions within the spinal cord, which refine the differential disease.
Hajime, Yokota, E Turgut, Tali
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Spinal infections

European Journal of Radiology, 2004
Spinal infections can be thought of as a spectrum of disease comprising spondylitis, discitis, spondylodiscitis, pyogenic facet arthropathy, epidural infections, meningitis, polyradiculopathy and myelitis. Radiological evaluations have gained importance in the diagnosis, treatment planning, treatment and treatment monitoring of the spinal infections ...
openaire   +3 more sources

Spinal tumors

European Journal of Radiology, 2004
Spinal tumors are uncommon lesions but may cause significant morbidity in terms of limb dysfunction. In establishing the differential diagnosis for a spinal lesion, location is the most important feature, but the clinical presentation and the patient's age and gender are also important.
Van Goethem, Johan   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Spinal infection

European Radiology, 1999
Spinal infection is a significant cause of morbidity. Despite advances in antibiotic treatment regimens, the incidence is not decreasing due at least in part to an increase in 'at-risk' populations, namely the elderly and the immunocompromised.
P N, Tyrrell   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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