Glossary
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
C
- A term generally applied to a dead human body preserved for anatomical
study.
- a tissue or organ transplanted from a cadaver (deceased donor)
- Individual wire fixation of a strut bone graft to involved facets.
- The great commisure of the brain between the cerebral hemispheres.
- Severe forward flexion of upper torso, usually an excessive psychologic
reaction to back pain.
- The spongy or honeycomb structure of some bone tissue
typically found at the ends of long bones.
- Draining of thoracic spinal abscess through an anterolateral approach.
- Cancer, a malignant growth of epithelial or gland cells.
- Large artery on either side of the neck which supplies
blood to most of the cerebral hemisphere. Main artery to the head that
divides into external and internal carotid arteries.
- Slight dilatation on the common carotid artery at
its bifurcation containing nerve cells sensitive to blood pressure.
Stimulation can cause slowing of the heart, vasodilatation and a fall
in blood pressure.
Back to Top
- Prominence of the transverse process of C-6 felt
on the lateral side of the neck.
- Space under a ligament in wrist through which the
median nerve enters the palm of the hand.
- A condition caused by compression of the
median nerve in the carpal tunnel, characterized especially by discomfort
and disturbances of sensation in the hand.
a material or device used to deliver a therapy to a site in or on the
body.
- The hard, thin layer of white glossy tissue that covers the end of
bone at a joint. This tissue allows motion to take place with a minimum
amount of friction.
- Narrowing of any cartilage space;
also called disc space narrowing.
- A small tube used to inject a dye to see the blood vessels, similar
to that used for looking at vessels in the heart.
- The bundle of spinal nerve roots arising from the
end of the spinal cord and filling the lower part of the spinal canal(from
approximately the thoraco-lumbar junction down).
- Sufficient pressure on the nerves in the
low back to produce multiple nerve root irritation and commonly loss
of bowel and bladder control.
- Part of the basal ganglia which are brain cells
that lie deep in the brain.
- a tissue or organ transplanted from a cadaver (deceased donor).
- a material or device used to deliver a therapy to a site in or on
the body.
Back to Top
- Most common of the incomplete traumatic spinal
cord syndromes characterized by motor impairment that is proportionately
greater in the upper limbs than in the lower, with bladder dysfunction
and a variable degree of sensory loss below the level of the cord lesion.
- Part of the nervous system which consists
of the brain and spinal cord, to which sensory impulses are transmitted
and from which motor impulses pass out, and which supervises and coordinates
the activity of the entire nervous system.
- The body of a vertebra.
- The lower part of the brain which is beneath the posterior portion
of the cerebrum and regulates unconscious coordination of movement.
- Water-like fluid produced in the brain that
circulates around and protects the brain and spinal cord. Shrinking
or expanding of the cranial contents is usually quickly balanced by
increase or decrease of this fluid.
- Relating to the brain or intellect.
- Surface layer of gray matter of the cerebrum that
functions chiefly in coordination of higher nervous activity; called
also pallium.
- Disability resulting from damage to the brain before
or during birth and outwardly manifested by muscular incoordination
and speech disturbances.
- Water-like fluid produced in the brain that circulates
and protects the brain and spinal cord, known as CSF.
- The principal portion of the brain, which occupies the major portion
of the interior of the skull and controls conscious movement, sensation
and thought.
Back to Top
- Of or relating to the neck.
- Plexus of nerves that supply the neck muscles
with branches named by muscles supplied, a portion which is called the
ansa cervicalis.
- Riblike structure in the seventh cervical vertebra
that may cause nerve root irritation.
- Spinal fusion involving the seven cervical
segments. This may include the base of the skull, the occiput, and the
first thoracic spine.
- A treatment of an intervertebral disc that consists of an injection
of chymopapain, a drug that dissolves part of the disc.
- Crossing of visual fibers as they head toward the
opposite side of the brain. For each optic nerve most of the visual
fibers cross to the opposite side, some run directly backward on each
side without crossing.
- A disorder, usually of childhood, characterized by irregular, spasmodic
involuntary movements of the limbs or facial muscles.
- A vascular structure in the ventricles of the brain
which produces cerebrospinal fluid.
- A long, curved convolution of the medial surface
of the cortical hemisphere.
- Electronic destruction of the anterior cingulate gyrus and callosum.
- A process of strictly controlled evaluations
involving patients. Some of these studies are required by the FDA prior
to general release of a device or compound for use in humans.
Back to Top
- The process of clotting.
- A term that is used in referring to cobalt-chromium-molybdenum alloy,
a mixture of metals used in many surgical implants.
- Pain in the coccyx region5 coccygodynia, coccyodynia, coccydynia.
- Remaining three or four, somewhat fixed, fused segments at the end
of the spine (tailbone) that articulate with sacrum above.
- Excision of the coccyx (tailbone).
- Incision into the coccyx (tailbone).
- The small bone at the end of the spinal column in man, formed by the
fusion of four rudimentary vertebrae. The three, and sometimes four,
segments of bone just below the sacrum; referred to as the tailbone.
- A fibrous protein which is a major constituent of connective tissue.
Such as skin, tendons, ligaments, cartilage, and bones.
- A band, usually denoting one encircling the neck.
- A state of profound unconsciousness from which one cannot be roused.
- For congenital or developmental reasons, the midsagittal
diameter is decreased.
- A fracture in which a bone is broken into
more than two pieces. Often internal or external fixation devices are
used to maintain proper alignment of the fragments.
Back to Top
- A longitudinal division of the spinal cord
to sever crossing fibers.
- A curve located above or below a rigid structural
curve to maintain normal overall body alignment.
- A squeezing together; the exertion of pressure on a body in such a
way as to tend to increase its density; the decrease in a dimension
of a body under the action of two external forces directed toward one
another in the same straight line.
- Mechanical process resulting from
a tumor, fracture, or herniated disc; the resulting irritation is called
radiculitis if there is actual inflammation around the nerve. Pain from
this type of disorder is called radicular pain.
- A diagnostic imaging technique in
which a computer reads x-rays to create a three-dimensional map of soft
tissue or bone.
- A disruption, usually temporary, of neurological function resulting
from a blow or violent shaking.
- Scoliosis due to bony abnormalities present
at birth involving either failure of formation of a vertebra or separation
of adjacent vertebrae.
- Normal-statured individuals with congenital variance
in vertebral structure leading to a narrow canal.
- To shorten; to become reduced in size; in the case of muscle, either
to shorten or to undergo an increase in tension.
- Any material (usually opaque to x-rays) employed
to delineate or define a structure during a radiologic procedure.
Back to Top
- A bruise; an area in which blood that has leaked out of blood vessels
is mixed with brain tissue.
- Transverse incision into the spinal cord.
- The line of junction of the frontal bones and the
parietal bones of the skull.
- Excision of vertebral body usually combined with interpostion of prosthesis
or bone graft.
- The greatest commissure of the brain between the
cerebral hemispheres.
- The external layer of gray matter covering the hemispheres of the
cerebrum and cerebellum.
- Pertaining to the cortex.
- The dense bone that forms the outer surface of bone.
- Combining form denoting relation to ribs.
- junction of the rib into cartilage in the anterior
chest. NOTE: Most of the ribs have attachment to the cartilage rather
than a direct junction with the breast bone.
- Juncture of tissue inferior and lateral to the twelfth
rib and vertebral body.
- Junction of the rib with the thoracic spine.
- Posterior fixation device for spinal deformity, fracture, tumor, and
degenerative conditions.
Back to Top
- A painful muscle spasm caused by prolonged tetanic contraction.
- The part of the skull that holds the brain.
- Opening of skull and removal of a portion of it.
- Congenital tumor arising from the embryonic duct between the brain
and pharynx.
- The operative repair of a defect of the skull.
- Premature closure of cranial sutures, limiting or distorting the growth
of the skull.
- Premature closure of cranial sutures, limiting or distorting the growth
of the skull.
- Opening of the skull, usually by creating a flap of bone.
- Progressions of a spinal curve due to continued
growth of the unfused anterior aspect of the spine following a posterior
spine fusion for scoliosis in children.
- Cartilage ring above the trachea and below the thyroid
cartilage, the first cricoid ring is at the level of C-6.
- Cerebrospinal Fluid.
- A bypass or diversion of accumulations of cerebrospinal
fluid to an absorbing or excreting system.
- (computed tomography scan): A diagnostic imaging
technique in which a computer reads x-rays to create a three-dimensional
map of soft tissue or bone.
- Study of cells.
Back to Top
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z