Glossary
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T
- Complex of symptoms often seen in cervical sprain conditions. Symptoms
include clicking in the jaw on opening and closing the mouth, soreness
in the jaw, headaches, buzzing sounds, changes in hearing, stiffness
in the neck and shoulders, dizziness, and swallowing disorders.
- The fibrous band of tissue that connects muscle to bone. It is mainly
composed of collagen.
- Inflammation of a tendon.
- The act of stretching. The condition of being stretched or tense,
or a stretching or pulling force.
- The process of the dura matter between the cerebrum
and cerebellum supporting the occipital lobes.
- Tumor or growth made up of several different types of tissue (fat,
bone, muscle, skin).
- Instrumentation used anteriorly
and posteriorly.
- The source of reimbursement or payment of charges
for medical services when the patient does not make direct payment:
i.e. payments made by insurance companies, government agencies or employers.
The patient and the doctor represent the two other parties in third
party pay arrangements.
- The chest level region of the spine that is located between the cervical
and lumbar vertebrae. It consists of 12 vertebrae which serve as attachment
points for ribs.
- A spinal curvature with its apex between the second
and eleventh thoracic vertebrae.
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- Mechanical problem related to the exit
of arteries and nerves at the base of the neck leading down the arm,
and can also involve the vein bringing blood back from the arm.
- A spinal curve with its apex at the first lumbar
or twelfth thoracic curve.
- A blood clot attached to the wall of an artery.
- Brain cells which lie in the upper part of the brainstem.
- The chest or rib cage; also refers to the space containing the lungs
and heart. There are 12 vertebral segments and ribs; the lower two are
called floating ribs.
- Widening expanses of cartilage above the trachea,
the top marks the level of C-4, the bottom C-5.
- Near the "Adam's apple;" responsible for secretion
of hormone that is involved in regulation of the rate of metabolism.
- (See trigeminal neuralgia).
- A collection of similar cells and the intercellular substances surrounding
them.
- A metallic element used to make surgical implants.
- A contraction, often spasmodic, of the muscles of the neck, chiefly
those supplied by the spinal accessory nerve; the head is drawn to one
side and usually rotated so that the chin points to the other side.
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- The study of the toxic or harmful effects of substances on the body.
- The windpipe.
- The act of drawing or pulling, as by an elastic or spring force. A
pulling or dragging force exerted on a limb in a distal direction.
- Bony excrescence appearing on the anterolateral surface
of the vertebral body near but not at the body margin that arises as
a result of disc degeneration.
- Surgical section of a fiber tract of the central nervous system.
- A drug that promotes tranquility by calming, soothing, quieting, or
pacifying without sedating or depressant effects.
- an operation where the lumbar
spine is approached through an incision in the back. A portion of bone
and disc are removed from the spine and replaced with an implant that
is inserted into the disc space.
- Vertebra whose structure features some of the
characteristics of the two adjacent vertebra. A common example is the
fifth lumbar vertebra that has partial sacral components.
- The implantation of bone tissue, as in grafting, from one part of
the body to another. Transplant also refers to the transfer of an organ
such as a kidney or heart from one individual to another.
- Operative method of reaching the pituitary gland
or skull base traversing the nose and sinuses.
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- Crosswise; lying across the long axis of the body or of a part.
- Bony process arising from midportion of the spinal
ring just posterior to the pedicle and pars interarticulars.
- Results from fracture in other areas of the bony hook than in pars
interarticularis.
- For surgical approaches and other considerations, the anterior half
of the neck is divided into triangles- anterior, digastric, posterior,
submental, and carotid.
- Paroxysmal pain in the face. Pain may be so severe
that it causes an involuntary grimace or "tic". (Tic Douloureux).
- For severe cervical spondylosis; an expansive, multiple laminectomy.
- Any swelling or tumefaction.
- See other nerves.
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