Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
There is a disc between each of the vertebrae in the spine. A healthy, well-hydrated disc will contain a great deal of water in its center, known as the nucleus pulposus, which provides cushioning and flexibility for the spine. Much of the mechanical stress that is caused by everyday movements is transferred to the discs within the spine and ...
Associated radiological findings include a vacuum phenomenon (in the nucleus pulposis of the adjacent intervertebral disc), reduction of disc height with corresponding loss of the disc space, marginal sclerosis of the adjacent vertebral bodies, osteophyte formation and apophyseal joint instability. With a retrolisthesis there is always a less ...
Its presentation on radiography is a radiolucent cleft often called a vacuum phenomenon, or vacuum sign. [7] Pneumarthrosis is associated with osteoarthritis and spondylosis. [8] Pneumarthrosis is a common normal finding in shoulders [7] as well as in sternoclavicular joints. [9] It is believed to be a cause of the sounds of joint cracking. [8]
Disc herniation can occur in any disc in the spine, but the two most common forms are lumbar disc herniation and cervical disc herniation. The former is the most common, causing low back pain (lumbago) and often leg pain as well, in which case it is commonly referred to as sciatica .
In neurology, Lhermitte phenomenon, also called the barber chair phenomenon, is an uncomfortable "electrical" sensation that runs down the back and into the limbs. The sensation can feel like it goes up or down the spine. It is painful for some, although others might simply feel strange sensations.
Robert A. Kyle is a professor of medicine, Laboratory Medicine and Pathology at the Mayo Clinic.He specializes in the care of patients with plasma cell dyscrasias. . Throughout his career Kyle has published more than 1,850 scientific papers and abstracts on myeloma and other plasma cell diso
Spinal disc protrusion visible in MRI [1] A disc protrusion is a medical condition that can occur in some vertebrates, including humans, in which the outermost layers of the anulus fibrosus of the intervertebral discs of the spine are intact but bulge when one or more of the discs are under pressure.
Lumbar disc disease is the drying out of the spongy interior matrix of an intervertebral disc in the spine. Many physicians and patients use the term lumbar disc disease to encompass several different causes of back pain or sciatica. In this article, the term is used to describe a lumbar herniated disc.