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  2. Vertebral hemangioma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vertebral_hemangioma

    These are predominantly benign lesions that are often found incidentally during radiology studies for other indications and can involve one or multiple vertebrae. Vertebral hemangiomas are a common etiology estimated to be found in 10-12% of humans at autopsy. [4] [5] [6] They are benign in nature and frequently asymptomatic. [5]

  3. Modic changes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modic_changes

    Modic changes are pathological changes in the bones of the spine, the vertebrae. These changes are situated in both the body of the vertebrae and in the end plate of the neighboring disc. Clinically, Modic Changes are often associated with constant lower back pain during the day, with peak pain occurring during the night and in the morning ...

  4. Hemangioma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemangioma

    A hemangioma or haemangioma is a usually benign vascular tumor derived from blood vessel cell types. The most common form, seen in infants, is an infantile hemangioma , known colloquially as a "strawberry mark", most commonly presenting on the skin at birth or in the first weeks of life.

  5. Artery of Adamkiewicz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artery_of_Adamkiewicz

    It typically arises from a 9th to 12th left posterior intercostal artery, [5] enters through the L2-L3 intervertebral foramen to join the anterior spinal artery and supply much of the inferior half of the spinal cord. [6] The artery is named after pathologist Albert Wojciech Adamkiewicz.

  6. Enostosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enostosis

    Enostosis is usually found in T1 to T7 for the thoracic spine and L2 to L3 in the lumbar spine. It consists of cortical bone merging with medullary bone with irregular margins. The shape of the lesion is round or oval with a thornlike margin, up to 2 cm in diameter. In both T1 and T2-weighted imaging, it shows low signal intensity.

  7. Cavernous hemangioma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavernous_hemangioma

    Cavernous hemangiomas of the brain and spinal cord (cerebral cavernous hemangiomas (malformations) (CCM)), can appear at all ages but usually occur in the third to fourth decade of a person's life with no sexual preference. In fact, CCM is present in 0.5% of the population. However, approximately 40% of those with malformations have symptoms.

  8. Hereditary neurocutaneous angioma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hereditary_neurocutaneous...

    One of these patients died at the age of 28 due to 'multiple dilated thin-walled vessels in the cerebral substance', said patient had a pink-colored hemangioma planum lesion of irregular shape located in the left shoulder, arm, and forearm which faded temporarily when it had pressure applied on it, the patient's younger brother developed a left ...

  9. Diastematomyelia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diastematomyelia

    Diastematomyelia is a "dysraphic state" of unknown embryonic origin, but is probably initiated by an accessory neurenteric canal (an additional embryonic spinal canal.).) This condition may be an isolated phenomenon or may be associated with other segmental anomalies of the vertebral bodies such as spina bifida, kyphoscoliosis, butterfly vertebra, hemivertebra and block vertebrae which are ...