5th lumber vertebrae and first sacral vertebra.
L5 means the fifth lumbar vertebra, and S1 means the first sacral vertebra. L5-S1 refers to the space bewteen those two back bones.
Narrowing of the space that nerves of the spinal chord pass through, Usually caused by age, trauma or arthritis.
It means that even though there is compression of the material between the discs there is no interference or pressure being put on the nerves that pass between them to the body.
Information on L23 L45 L5 S1 In The Spine
A homophone for stand is "stann," which is a rare alternative spelling of 'stand.'
When the night has come And the land is dark And the moon is the only light we see No I won't be afraid No I won't be afraid Just as long as you stand, stand by me And darling, darling stand by me Oh, now, now, stand by me Stand by me, stand by me If the sky that we look upon Should tumble and fall And the mountain should crumble to the sea I won't cry, I won't cry No I won't shed a tear Just as long as you stand, stand by me And darling, darling stand by me Oh, stand by me Stand by me, stand by me, stand by me Whenever you're in trouble won't you stand by me Oh, now, now, stand by me Oh, stand by me, stand by me, stand by me Darling, darling stand by me Stand by me Oh stand by me, stand by me, stand by me
This means that L5 (the bottom vertebra of the lumbar spine) has fractured and compressed (telescoped) into S1 (the top of the sacral bone), and that there is no compression of the spinal cord (That is a GOOD thing!!)... If you'll copy the following web address (Back.com) and paste it into your browser, you can see the pictures and description of what I'm talking about... http://www.back.com/anatomy-lumbar.html
Stand Strong Stand Proud was created in 1982.
Stand-Up Stand-Up - 1992 Stand-Up Stand-Up 3-12 was released on: USA: 7 August 1995
sit stand
Retort stand Tripod stand The answer is stand
Stand to is when some one asks you to STAND and LISTEN
The future tense of stand is "will stand."