osteomyelitis
its an acute infection of the bone and/or bone marrow osteomyelitis is infection of the bone
Leukemia
The medical term for infection of bone and bone marrow is osteomyelitis. This condition can be caused by bacteria, viruses, or fungi entering the bloodstream and spreading to the bones, leading to inflammation and infection. Symptoms may include bone pain, fever, and swelling at the site of infection.
Microscopic examination of bone marrow can reveal leukemia, granulomas, myelofibrosis, myeloma, lymphoma, or metastatic cancers, bone marrow infection, and bone disease.
Myelitis is infection or inflammation of the bone marrow. Osteomyelitis is more common - infection or inflammation of the bone and neighboring bone marrow. If these conditions are caused by bacteria, they may be called bacterial myelitis or bacterial osteomyelitis.
Osteomyelitis is a pus-producing infection of bone marrow or bone structure, usually caused by bacteria or fungi.
Mushy bone marrow is caused by Osteomyelitis, which is an inflammation of the bone marrow and surrounding bone. The bone marrow swells and presses against the bone's blood vessels when a bone gets infected, causing parts of the bone to die and the infection to spread to surrounding muscles and other soft tissues.
Osteomyelitis
No, osteomyelitis is inflammation (usually due to infection) of bone marrow and surrounding bone.
Inflammation of the bones and bone marrow is known as osteomyelitis. This is a severe infection that may require long-term treatment.
Osteomyelitis is the inflammation and infection of bone. The inflammation and infection is caused by pathogenic microorganisms and requires intensive intravenous antibiotic therapy to cure it.
Nonspecific diffusely heterogeneous bone marrow appearance refers to abnormal imaging findings on a bone marrow MRI or CT scan where the marrow shows a mottled or uneven appearance without a specific underlying cause. This can be seen in various conditions such as infection, inflammation, or infiltrative diseases affecting the bone marrow. Further evaluation may be necessary to determine the underlying cause.