When you're told that an MRI is "not remarkable" or "unremarkable" it usually means that they didn't find anything within the result. Where as if you were told it was "remarkable" it typically means that they found something in the area where they were looking.
I had an MRI that said this and the Dr's response was that it looked good. So I guess that's the medical way of saying that everything looks fine.
Grossly unremarkable means there is nothing interesting to talk about, its normal.
Negative MRI knee
It means nothing to worry about.
The term 'unremarkable' when used in medical terminology refers to nothing out of the ordinary. The term unremarkable aorta on an MRI reading would mean there is nothing to be concerned about with the aorta, there is nothing out of the ordinary.
When a medical report states that nerve roots are unremarkable, it indicates that there are no observable abnormalities or issues with the nerve roots on imaging or examination. This suggests that the nerve roots appear normal and are functioning as expected.
Visualized osseous structures that are unremarkable in a chest Xray means that everything is normal. Anytime unremarkable is used in an X-ray report it means that the film is normal.
It means that everything is the way it should be in your cervical spine. Nothing is wrong.
It means the muscles, ligaments, and tendons in your lower back are normal on MRI.
No answer can be given without further context.
When a doctor says your medical report is unremarkable, it means that there are no significant findings or abnormalities noted in the report. It indicates that everything appears to be within normal limits based on the tests or evaluations that were conducted.
groove
This was on my MRI report