Glossary
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A
- For scoliosis of the spine; traction is applied
to produce overcorrection, followed by casting.
- Important for support of the spine, these muscles
are the rectus abdominis, external oblique, internal oblique, and transversus.
- Movement away from midline of body in frontal plane; applied to hip,
shoulder, fingers, thumb, and foot.
- Any superficial scraping of skin tissue or mucous membrane mechanically
or through injury.
- Localized collection of pus in a cavity which may form in any
tissue.
- Increased vertebral thickness, marked concavity
of the vertebral body, and shortened pedicles.
- Benign tumor of the hearing nerve (eighth nerve).
A progressively enlarging, benign tumor, usually within the internal
auditory canal or hearing nerve.
- Disorder marked by progressive enlargement of the head, face, hands,
feet, and thorax, due to the excessive secretion of growth hormone.
- A type of tremor that occurs during voluntary movements,
such as lifting a cup to one's mouth.
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- The therapy uses an implanted device
to deliver mild electrical stimulation to block the brain signals that
cause tremor. The therapy stimulates the target nuclei in the thalamus
via an insulated wire lead with electrodes that are surgically implanted
in the brain and connected to a pulse generator that is implanted near
the collarbone. The stimulation level can be adjusted to get the most
possible tremor control with minimal side effects.
- Severe, for a short time.
- Cancer arising from secretory cells, often in a gland. Breast and
pancreatic cancers are usually adenocarcinomas.
- A benign growth formed of glandular tissue.
- Lateral curvature of the spine occurring during
adolescence.
- Scoliosis occuring after skeletal maturity.
- Anterior approach to inferior C-2 to
fractured dens with screws.
- Antiepileptic drugs.
- Transmitting impulses to the central nervous system.
- Absence of the ability to recognize the form and nature of persons
and things.
- Loss of the power of writing due either to muscular incoordination
or to an inability to phrase thought.
- Abnormality in development of the sacroiliac
joint.
- Fusion of the spine using grafts across the spinous processes in spondylolisthesis.
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- Sterile bone derived from another human which is used
for grafting procedures.
- Loss of vision without discoverable lesion in the eye structures
or optic nerve. Amaurosis fugax - temporary blindness occurring in short
periods.
- Absence of the menses due to causes other than pregnancy or advancing
age.
- Loss of memory caused by brain damage or by severe emotional trauma.
- Loss of sensibility to pain, loss of response to a painful stimulus.
- In the case of a body cell, a reversion to a more primitive condition.
A term used to denote the alteration in cell character which constitutes
malignancy.
- A communication, direct or indirect: A joining together. In the
nervous system a jointing of nerves or blood vessels.
- Physician who administers pain-killing medications during surgery.
- Absence of the greater part of the brain, often with skull deformity.
- Loss of sensation of a body part; or of the body when induced by the
administration of a drug.
- Physician who administers pain-killing medications during surgery.
- Dilation of an artery, formed by a circumscribed enlargement of its
wall. Saccular (berry) aneurysm - sac-like bulging on one side of an
artery usually arising at an arterial branching.
- A study which shows the blood vessels leading to and in the brain
by injecting a dye or contrast substance through a catheter placed in
the artery in the leg.
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- A tumor whose cells tend to form blood vessels (hemangioma) or lymph
vessels (lymphangioma).
- Radiography of blood vessels using the injection of material opaque
to x-rays to give better definition to the vessels.
- Different abnormal shapes of the vertebral bodies.
- Arthritic disorder in which
bridgingosteophytes located anteriorly and posteriorly on the vertebral
body bind two or more vertebrae together; Forestier disease.
- stiffening or fixation of the vertebra; an
inflammatory joint disease mainly affecting the spine hips, and pelvis.
- The outer, fibrous, ring-like portion of an intervertebral
disc.
- Loss of appetite; a condition marked by loss of appetite leading to
weight loss.
- Without the sense of smell.
- Total lack of oxygen supply.
- Front of the body or situated nearer the front of the body.
- When used to approach the cervical, cervicodorsal,
dorsal, and lumbar spines, it is designed to provide sufficient surface
for multiple segmental spinal fusions; Hodgson, Roaf. For specific cervical
spinal explorations and fusions; Southwick and Robinson, Bailey and
Badgley, Whitesides and kelly, Henry (to vertebral artery).
- an operation where the cervical spine
is reached through a small incision in the front of your neck. After
the soft tissues of the neck are separated, the intervertebral disc
and bone spurs are removed.
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- an operation performed
on the upper spine to relieve pressure on one or more nerve roots, or
on the spinal cord. The term is derived from the words anterior (front),
cervical (neck), and fusion (joining the vertebrae with a bone graft).
- Forward movement of the superior segment
on the inferior one.
- operation where the lumbar
spine is approached through an incision in the abdomen. A portion of
the affected disc space is removed from the spine and replaced with
an implant.
- Approaching the spine from the front, the
intervertable disc and/or vertebral body is removed and bone graft is
inserted. Some variations of this procedure include the Smith-Robinson,
Cloward and dowel procedures.
- Ligament turning to bone on anterior side of vertebral
body.
- Situated or occurring in front of and to the side.
- An approach to the dorsal spine by rib resection
to explore the spine anteriorly and in some cases to do spinal fusions
and decompressions spinal cord.
- A medication that prevents coagulation of the blood.
- An agent which reduces the output of urine. Antidiuretic hormone (ADH)
is formed in the hypothalamus and stored in the posterior pituitary
gland. Its secretion reduces urine output.
- A posteriorly placed spinal fixation device.
- Difficulty with, or loss of use of language, in any of several ways
including reading, writing or speaking. Failure of understanding of
the written, printed or spoken word not related to intelligence but
to specific lesions in the brain.
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- Cessation of respiration; inability to get one's breath.
- A sudden event. Often used as equivalent to stroke.
- Middle layer of membranes covering the brain and spinal cord.
- Inflammation of the arachnoid membrane, most commonly seen within
the spinal cord around the spinal cord and cauda equina.
- (Cortical) - A part of the brain having a special function as in
- Motor a. - The
cortical portion of the brain controlling movement.
- Sensory a. -
The cortical portion, controlling sensation.
- A condition in which there is displacement
of the medulla and cerebellum into the opening in the basilar part of
the occipital bone. It is one of the causes of hydrocephalus and is
usually accompanied by spina bifida and menigomyelocele.
- See angiography.
- Thickening and calcification of the arterial wall with loss of elasticity
and contractility.
- Relating to both arteries and veins.
- Collection of blood vessels with one or several
abnormal communications between arteries and veins which may cause hemorrhage
or seizures.
- An important source of blood supply
to the lower portion of the spine, usually occurring at T-9 to T-11
level; however, not the only blood supply to the cord at that level.
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- Joint pain.
- Inflammation of a joint usually characterized by swelling, pain and
restriction of motion.
- The fusion of bones across a joint space, thereby limiting or eliminating
movement. It may occur spontaneously or as a result of a surgical procedure,
such as fusion of the spine.
- Any disease or disorder involving a joint.
- The surgical remodeling of a diseased or damaged joint.
- An instrument inserted into it's joint cavity to view the interior
of a joint and correct certain abnormalities. An arthroscope is an endoscope
for use in a joint.
- The procedure of visualizing the inside of a joint by means of an
arthroscope.
- Pertaining to a joint.
- Cell which supports the nerve cells (neurons) of the brain and spinal
cord.
- Tumor within the substance of the brain or spinal cord made up of
astrocytes - often classified from Grade I (slow-growing) to Grade III
(rapid-growing).
- A loss of muscular coordination, abnormal clumsiness.
- A condition in which there is a succession of slow, writhing, involuntary
movements of the fingers and hands, and sometimes of the toes and feet.
Pertaining to the atlas and the axis; denoting the joint between
the first two cervical vertebrae.
- See atlanto-axial.
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- Relating to the atlas and the occipital bone.
- Relating to the atlas and the dens of the axis.
- First cervical vertebrae, articulating with the occipital bone and
rotating around the dens of the axis.
- Seizures that are characterized by a sudden loss
of muscle tone, causing the individual to instantly drop to the floor,
commonly known as "drop attacks."
- A wasting of the tissues of a body part.
- Warning sign that people with epilepsy often experience prior to the
onset of a seizure, which may consist of a strange taste, bad feeling,
or tingling sensation.
- Bone originating from the same individual; i.e., an
individual's own bone.
- Bone transplanted from one part to another part of
the body in the same individual.
- a graft in which the donor and recipient area are in the same individual.
- Involuntary nervous system, also termed
the vegetative nervous system. A system of nerve cells whose activities
are beyond voluntary control.
- Non-vascular, not provided with blood vessels.
- Deformity, abnormal shape
or structure relating to veins and arteries.
- The vertebral column. The second cervical vertebra, about which the
first cervical vertebra rotates, allowing head movement.
- The part of a nerve cell that usually sends signals to other nerves
or structures.
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