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posterior superior iliac spineposterior superior iliac spine.
"No aggressive osseous lesion" means that there is no evidence of any rapidly growing or destructive bone abnormalities on imaging studies such as X-rays or CT scans. It suggests that there are no concerning indicators of aggressive bone disease or malignancy.
The bony landmarks are: iliac crest (a good place to put you hands on), anterior superior iliac spine (that "bump" you can feel on either side of your stomach if it is flat), symphysis pubis (between the legs), sacral promontory which you can not feel but is above the leaf shaped tail bone called the sacrum. Plus the lower ribs and end of the sternum.
This is an XRay reporting that there is a bony "scarred" area in the Sacroiliac joint. This scarring would show up on the XRays as a very white area, and is due to the elevated calcium deposited into where the fusion was done. Sclerosis shows up where there has been bony trauma (in this case, fusion). Actually, the body comes in and using special cells (osteoclasts) removes old bone , then new bony tissue (osteoblasts) come in, and once the new bone cells are in place calcium is then deposited into the new bony matrix. So this is a good report...
yes b/c a bony fish has to have a bony body
There are bony fishes and cartilaginous fishes.
Yes,they are very bony.
Yes, it is a bony fish. They belong to the Osteicthyes class of bony fish.
Yes, it is a bony fish. They belong to the Osteicthyes class of bony fish.
bony
They belong to the bony fish category. See the related link.
Yeah, kind of. They have scales...