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Type your answer here... acute vessal closure
Depends on the lesion. Could be comedonal, papular, pustular or nodular.
dono...
Well since a lesion is a cut or wound, no. Not unless it was an infection that has hard pieces that could cut the brain.
6x1=
It is caused by a sexually transmitted virus, called HPV. It progresses from a benign lesion to a low grade lesion. It then progresses to a high grade lesion which can progress to a microinvasive and then invasive lesion
Lesion is a nonspecific term that means any abnormality in tissue. If you didn't have an abnormality, you wouldn't be scheduling surgery. Talk with your orthopedist for information about your examination results.
Based on only this very limited info, the codes could be 13120-13122, 13160. The exact code will depend on size of the area repaired. Code 13160 if it's a secondary repair. Scar revision is a complex repair process. If associated lesion removal is there too, code that separately.
A 17.6-cm lesion on the liver could be caused by a number of things. Cancer may be a cause. Non-cancerous possibilities include adenomas and hemangiomas.
The psoas muscle is responsible for stabilizing the spine and allowing it to flex and also allows for rotation of the hips for movement. A lesion in this area would likely cause lower back pain and would limit a person's range of motion and flexibility. If the lesion were to spread to the right neural foramina, this could cause further complications since this is a nerual pathway down the spinal cord. If the lesion were to spread to this area it could occlude where those nerve fibers exit.
The diagnosis of colon cancer is actually made by the performance of a biopsy of any abnormal lesion in the colon. When a tumor growth is identified, it could be either a benign polyp (or lesion) or a cancer; the biopsy resolves the issue.
A hypoechoic structure or mass is a mass which appears as very dark when ultrasound pictures are taken. It could be indicative of a tumor, or it may be benign.