No. Not all bones have possess a body, spine, and transverse foramina
The atlas, the first vertebrae.
Narrowing of the neural foramina is the constriction of the nerve passageways, or foramina, in the spine. This results in compression of the nerve.
Giraffes possess seven vertebrae (although disputed by some zoologists who claim that it has eight)A giraffe has 50 vertebrae in total... seven in the cervical, seven in the spine and I am not sure about the rest...
It's basically compression of your spine by the surrounding canal in the specific area your doctor is speaking of. Foramina, in this case, are the spaces in between your vertebrae. Encroachment is squeezing or compression of those spaces. I have bilateral bony foraminal encroachment of some of the disc spaces of my C spine. It doesn't normally bother me at all, though.
The thoracic spine has the most vertebrae - twelve.
The bony segments of the spine is the vertebrae.
No, an amoeba is an invertebrate since it does not have any spinal bone structures or any bones at all. |:D
the thoracic spine is above the lumbar spine which means ALL thoracic vertebrae are superior to the lumbar vertebrae.
the individual bones of the spine are called "Vertebrae"
Foramina are openings. Neural foramina patent bilaterally just means that the openings in the spine are open, and allow the nerves to pass through normally...
The vertebrae at the end of the spine are fused to form the coccyx (tailbone).
The 33 ring-shaped bones of the spine are called the vertebrae.