Subchondral lucences are clear-appearing areas under the cartilage.
This report indicates that there is abnormal bone formation in the right parietal region of the skull, with a suggestion of a C-shaped area of lucency (transparency) that may indicate an area of potential concern, such as a cyst or a defect in the bone. Further evaluation may be needed to determine the exact cause and implications of these findings.
The small focus of marrow signal alteration could indicate a localized change in the bone marrow tissue, which might be due to different factors such as inflammation, infection, trauma, or a benign lesion. Further imaging studies or clinical evaluation may be needed to determine the specific cause and potential implications.
Subchondral cystic changes are fluid-filled cavities that form in the bone just underneath the cartilage in a joint. They can be seen on imaging studies like MRI and may be related to conditions such as osteoarthritis or bone trauma. These cysts can cause pain, stiffness, and joint instability.
Related to bone condyles that have swelling beneath the surface. The condyles are the rounded lumpy bits at the end of long thin bones: finger bones (phalanges) or thigh (femur). Subchondral odema occurs commonly when thes bones are forced together sometimes with repeated running on hard surfaces sub femoral or tibial chondral/plataeu or when staving your finger during basket ball straight finger compression. Can take a long time to settle but can settle to no symptoms.
Hypochondral or subchondral.subchondral
This report indicates that there is abnormal bone formation in the right parietal region of the skull, with a suggestion of a C-shaped area of lucency (transparency) that may indicate an area of potential concern, such as a cyst or a defect in the bone. Further evaluation may be needed to determine the exact cause and implications of these findings.
A lucency on an X-ray image represents an area absorbing less radioactive energy than the surrounding tissue. Lucent areas appear dark compared to the surrounding area.
In dental terms, abnormal lucency refers to an area on a radiograph that appears darker than the surrounding tissues, indicating a potential loss of mineral content or density. This can signify various dental issues, such as dental caries (cavities), periodontal disease, or bone loss. The presence of abnormal lucency often requires further investigation to determine the underlying cause and appropriate treatment.
"Lucency" is a technical term for an area that lets x-rays through tissue and appears darker on the picture. "Peri-screw lucency" is a result of having had a peri-screw inserted into the bone, possibly due to an accident.
ageing or degenertive enthesopathy
Heterogeneous lucency refers to an imaging finding where there are both darker and lighter areas within a tissue, such as seen on a radiograph or CT scan. This can be indicative of a mixed composition of tissues or materials within the area being imaged. In medical imaging, heterogeneous lucency might prompt further investigation to determine the underlying cause.
Lucency on medical imaging, such as X-rays, is caused by the passage of X-rays through less dense tissues like air or fluid. This results in those areas appearing darker on the image. Lucency can be seen in conditions like pneumothorax (air in the chest cavity) or pulmonary nodules (small round growth in the lung).
Osteopenia is abnormally low bone density. In this case, the problem is below the cartilage of the larger bone of the forearm at the wrist.
Patches and irregular areas of density is pneumonia. Shadows in the lung roots may indicate enlarged lymph nodes of a malignancy. Wide spaces between ribs and increased lucency suggests emphysema.
yes
There is some thinning of the bone in the pelvis.
Ask again, saying which body part is being imaged.