Unremarkable in medical terms means that something is normal. In this case, the end of the spinal cord is normal.
Conus medullaris is unremarkable means that upon examination, there are no abnormalities or anomalies detected in the conus medullaris, which is the tapered end of the spinal cord. This finding suggests that the structure appears normal and there are no apparent issues to note.
It just means that the base part of your spinal column is normal/ordinary. No problems seen. I just had an MRI done with the same result listed.
The conus medullaris, the terminal end of the spinal cord, is located near L1 and L2.
Conus medullaris is the lower end of the spinal cord. L1 is level 1 of the lumbar vertebral. T12 refers to the 12 thoracic pairs. It shows the position at the spinal cord where the conus medullaris ends.
The "Conus Medullaris".
Conus medullaris is the lower end of the spinal cord. L1 is level 1 of the lumbar vertebral. T12 refers to the 12 thoracic pairs. It shows the position at the spinal cord where the conus medullaris ends.
conus medullaris
conus medullaris
filum terminale
The conus medullaris is the bottom part of the spinal cord. It normally ends at T12 or L1, so you are normal. Below that level, the spinal canal contains a bundle of loose nerves called the cauda equina.
The conus medullaris is the terminal end of the spinal cord. It occurs near lumbar nerves 1 (L1) and 2 (L2). After the spinal cord terminates, the spinal nerves continue as dangling nerves called the cauda equina. The upper end of the conus medullaris is usually not well defined.For the source and more detailed information concerning your request, click on the related links section (Answers.com) indicated below.
the filum terminale which extends from the conus medullaris.
I am not a professional but I have this phrase in my spinal MRI results for my lumbar spine. The conus medullaris terminates (ends) normally in a certain area or near a certain vertebrae in your spine. Like L-1 or L-2. Possibly this is what your looking for.