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Neurosurgery
Glossary of Terms
Please click on a letter to lookup
a word.
A | B | C | D
| E | F | G | H
| I | J | K | L
| M | N | O | P
| Q | R | S | T
| U | V | XA
- ABCESS - A circumscribed
collection of pus.
- ACOUSTIC NEURINOMAS - Benign
tumor of the hearing nerve (eighth nerve).
- ACROMEGALY - Disorder marked
by progressive enlargement of the head, face, hands, feet, and thorax,
due to the excessive secretion of growth hormone.
- ADENOMA - A benign growth
formed of glandular tissue.
- AGNOSIA - Absence of the
ability to recognize the form and nature of persons and things.
- AGRAPHIA - Loss of the power
of writing due either to muscular incoordination or to an inability
to phrase thought.
- AMAUROSIS - Loss of vision
without discoverable lesion in the eye structures or optic nerve. Amaurosis
fugax - temporary blindness occurring in short periods.
- AMENORRHEA - Absence of
the menses due to causes other than pregnancy or advancing age.
- AMNESIA - Loss of memory
caused by brain damage or by severe emotional trauma.
- ANALGESIA - Loss of sensibility
to pain, loss of response to a painful stimulus.
- ANAPLASIA - In the case
of a body cell, a reversion to a more primitive condition. A term used
to denote the alteration in cell character which constitutes malignancy.
- ANASTOMOSIS - A communication,
direct or indirect: A joining together. In the nervous system a jointing
of nerves or blood vessels.
- ANESTHESIOLOGIST - Physician
who administers pain-killing medications during surgery.
- ANENCEPHALY - Absence of
the greater part of the brain, often with skull deformity.
- ANESTHESIA - Loss of sensation
of a body part; or of the body when induced by the administration of
a drug.
- ANESTHESIOLOGIST Physician
who administers pain-killing medications during surgery.
- ANEURYSM - Dilation of an
artery, formed by a circumscribed enlargement of its wall. Saccular
(berry) aneurysm - sac-like bulging on one side of an artery usually
arising at an arterial branching.
- ANGIOGRAM - a study which
shows the blood vessels leading to and in the brain by injecting a dye
or contrast substance through a catheter placed in the artery in the
leg.
- ANGIOGRAPHY - Radiography
of blood vessels using the injection of material opaque to x-rays to
give better definition to the vessels.
- ANOREXIA - Loss of appetite;
a condition marked by loss of appetite leading to weight loss.
- ANOSMIC - Without the sense
of smell.
- ANOXIA - Total lack of oxygen
supply.
- ANTI-COAGULANT - A medication
that prevents coagulation of the blood.
- ANTIDIURETIC - An agent
which reduces the output of urine. Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) is formed
in the hypothalamus and stored in the posterior pituitary gland. Its
secretion reduces urine output.
- APHASIA - Difficulty with,
or loss of use of language, in any of several ways including reading,
writing or speaking. Failure of understanding of the written, printed
or spoken word not related to intelligence but to specific lesions in
the brain.
- APNEA - Cessation of respiration;
inability to get one's breath.
- APOPLEXY - A sudden event.
Often used as equivalent to stroke.
- ARACHNOID - Middle layer
of membranes covering the brain and spinal cord.
- ARACHNOIDITIS - Inflammation
of the arachnoid membrane, most commonly seen within the spinal cord
around the spinal cord and cauda equina.
- AREA - (Cortical) - A part
of the brain having a special function as in
- Motor a. - The cortical
portion of the brain controlling movement.
- Sensory a. - The cortical
portion, controlling sensation.
- ARTERIOGRAPHY - See angiography.
- ARTERIOSCLEROSIS - Thickening
and calcification of the arterial wall with loss of elasticity and contractility.
- ARTERIOVENOUS - Relating
to both arteries and veins.
- ARTERIOVENOUS MALFORMATION
- Collection of blood vessels with one or several abnormal communications
between arteries and veins which may cause hemorrhage or seizures.
- ASTROCYTE - Cell which supports
the nerve cells (neurons) of the brain and spinal cord.
- ASTROCYTOMA - Tumor within
the substance of the brain or spinal cord made up of astrocytes - often
classified from Grade I (slow-growing) to Grade III (rapid-growing).
- ATAXIA - A loss of muscular
coordination, abnormal clumsiness.
- ATHETOSIS - A condition
in which there is a succession of slow, writhing, involuntary movements
of the fingers and hands, and sometimes of the toes and feet.
- ATROPHY - A wasting of the
tissues of a body part.
- AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
- Involuntary nervous system, also termed the vegetative nervous system.
A system of nerve cells whose activities are beyond voluntary control.
- AVASCULAR - Non-vascular,
not provided with blood vessels.
- AXON - The part of a nerve
cell that usually sends signals to other nerves or structures.
B
- BACTERICIDAL - Causing the
death of bacteria.
- BACTERIOSTATIC - Inhibiting
or retarding the growth of bacteria.
- BELL'S PALSY - Paralysis
of facial muscles (usually one side) due to facial nerve dysfunction
of unknown cause.
- BIOPSY - Removal of a small
portion of tissue, usually for the purpose of making a diagnosis.
- BLOOD-BRAIN-BARRIER - The
barrier which exists between the blood and the cerebrospinal fluid which
prevents the passage of various substances from the bloodstream to the
brain.
- BRADYCARDIA - Slowness of
the heart rate.
- BRADYKINESIA - Slowness
in movement.
- BROWN-SEQUARD'S SYNDROME
- Loss of sensation of touch, position sense, and movement on the side
of a spinal cord lesion, with loss of pain sensation on the other side.
Caused by a lesion limited to one side of spinal cord.
C
- CARCINOMA - Cancer, a malignant
growth of epithelial or gland cells.
- CAROTID ARTERY - Large artery
on either side of the neck which supplies most of the cerebral hemisphere.
- CAROTID SINUS - Slight dilatation
on the common carotid artery at its bifurcation containing nerve cells
sensitive to blood pressure. Stimulation can cause slowing of the heart,
vasodilatation and a fall in blood pressure.
- CARPAL TUNNEL - Space under
a ligament in wrist through which the median nerve enters the palm of
the hand.
- CT SCAN - (computed tomography
scan): A diagnostic imaging technique in which a computer reads x-rays
to create a three-dimensional map of soft tissue or bone.
- CATHETER - a small tube
used to inject a dye to see the blood vessles, similar to that used
for looking at vessels in the heart.
- CAUDA EQUINA - The bundle
of spinal nerve roots arising from the end of the spinal cord and filling
the lower part of the spinal canal(from approximately the thoraco-lumbar
junction down).
- CAUDATE NUCLEUS - part of
the basal ganglia which are brain cells that lie deep in the brain.
- CEREBELLUM - The lower part
of the brain which is beneath the posterior portion of the cerebrum
and regulates unconscious coordination of movement.
- CEREBROSPINAL FLUID - Water-like
fluid produced in the brain that circulates around and protects the
brain and spinal cord.
- CEREBRUM - The principal
portion of the brain, which occupies the major portion of the interior
of the skull and controls conscious movement, sensation and thought.
- CERVICAL - Of or relating
to the neck.
- CHIASM (OPTIC) - Crossing
of visual fibers as they head toward the opposite side of the brain.
For each optic nerve most of the visual fibers cross to the opposite
side, some run directly backward on each side without crossing.
- CHOREA - A disorder, usually
of childhood, characterized by irregular, spasmodic involuntary movements
of the limbs or facial muscles.
- CHOROID PLEXUS - A vascular
structure in the ventricles of the brain which produces cerebrospinal
fluid.
- COCCYX - The small bone
at the end of the spinal column in man, formed by the fusion of four
rudimentary vertebrae. The "tail bone".
- COMA - A state of profound
unconsciousness from which one cannot be roused.
- COMPUTED TOMOGRAPHY (CT)
SCAN- A diagnostic imaging technique in which a computer reads x-rays
to create a three-dimensional map of soft tissue or bone.
- CONCUSSION - A disruption,
usually temporary, of neurological function resulting from a blow or
violent shaking.
- CONTRAST MEDIUM - Any material
(usually opaque to x-rays) employed to delineate or define a structure
during a radiologic procedure.
- CONTUSION - A bruise; an
area in which blood that has leaked out of blood vessels is mixed with
brain tissue.
- CORONAL SUTURE - The line
of junction of the frontal bones and the parietal bones of the skull.
- CORTEX - The external layer
of gray matter covering the hemispheres of the cerebrum and cerebellum.
- CRANIUM - The part of the
skull that holds the brain.
- CRANIECTOMY - Excision of
a portion of the skull.
- CRANIOPHARYNGIOMA - Congenital
tumor arising from the embryonic duct between the brain and pharynx.
- CRANIOPLASTY - The operative
repair of a defect of the skull.
- CRANIOSYNOSTOSIS - Premature
closure of cranial sutures, limiting or distorting the growth of the
skull.
- CRANIOTOMY - Opening of
the skull, usually by creating a flap of bone.
- CSF - Cerebrospinal Fluid.
D
- DEPRESSED SKULL FRACTURE
- A break in the bones of the head in which some bone is pushed inward,
possibly pushing on or cutting into the brain.
- DIABETES INSIPIDUS - Excretion
of large amounts of urine of low specific gravity. The inability to
concentrate urine.
- DIFFUSE AXONAL INJURY -
Damage to the axons of many nerve cells that lie in different parts
of the brain.
- DIFFUSE BRAIN INJURY - Damage
to the brain that can affect many parts of the brain, often in a subtle
fashion; examples include diffuse axonal injury and inadequate blood
flow.
- DIPHENYLHYDANTOIN - Dilantin;
a medication used to control seizures.
- DIPLOPIA - Double vision,
due usually to weakness or paralysis of one or more of the extra-ocular
muscles.
- DISC - The intervertebral
disc - cartilaginous cushion found between the vertebrae of the spinal
column. It may bulge beyond the vertebral body and compress the nearby
nerve root, causing pain. The terms "slipped disc", "ruptured
disc" and "herniated disc" are often used interchangeably
even though there are subtle differences.
- DOME - the round balloon
like portion of the aneurysm which usually arises from the artery from
a smaller portion called the neck of the aneurysm.
- DOPPLER - A non-invasive
study which uses sound waves to show the flow in a blood vessel and
can be used to determine the degree of narrowing (percent stenosis)
of the vessel. A wand is placed on the skin over the vessel to be imaged.
This study has no risks and is not painful.
- DURA - Dura mater.
- DURA MATER - A tough fibrous
membrane which covers the brain and spinal cord, but is separated from
them by a small space.
- DYSESTHESIA - A condition
in which a disagreeable sensation is produced by ordinary touch, temperature
or movement.
- DYSPHASIA - Difficulty in
the use of language due to a brain lesion without mental impairment.
- DYSTONIA MUSCULORM DEFORMANS
- An affliction occurring especially in children, marked by muscular
contractions producing distortions of the spin and hips.
E
- EDEMA - An excessive accumulation
of fluid generally in extracellular.
- ELECTROENCEPHALOPGRAHY (EEG)
- The study of the electrical currents set up by brain actions; the
record made is called an electroencephalogram.
- ELECTROMYOGRAPHY (EMG) -
A method of recording the electrical currents generated in a muscle
during its contraction.
- ENDARTERECTOMY - Removal
of fatty or cholesterol plaques and calcified deposits from the internal
wall of an artery.
- ENDOCRINE GLAND - A gland
which furnishes an internal secretion, usually having an effect on another
organ.
- ENDOCRINOPATHY - Any disease
due to abnormality of quantity or quality in one or more of the internal
glandular secretions.
- EPENDYMA - The membrane
lining the cerebral ventricles of the brain and central canal of the
spinal cord.
- EPENDYMOMA - A growth in
the brain or spinal cord arising from ependymal tissue.
- EPIDURAL - Immediately outside
the dura mater. Same as extradural.
- EPIDURAL HEMATOMA - A blood
clot between the dura mater and the inside of the skull.
- EPILEPSY - Disorder characterized
by abnormal electrical discharges in the brain, causing abnormal sensation,
movement or level of consciousness.
F
- FALX (CEREBRI) - An extension
of dura between the right and left hemispheres of the brain.
- FONTANELLE - Normal openings
in he skull of infants; the largest of these is the anterior fontanel
or "soft spot" in the middle of the head.
- FORAMINOTOMY - Surgical
opening or enlargement of the bony opening traversed by a nerve root
as it leaves the spinal canal.
- FUSIFORM ANEURYSM - a sausage-like
enlargement of the vessel
G
- GALACTORRHEA - The discharge
of milk from the breasts.
- GAMMA KNIFE - Equipment
that precisely delivers a concentrated dose of radiation to a predetermined
target using gamma rays.
- GCS - Glasgow Coma Scale.
- GLASGOW COMA SCALE - The
most widely used system of classifying the severity of head injuries
or other neurological diseases.
- GLASGOW OUTCOME SCALE -
A widely used system of classifying outcome after head injury or other
neurological diseases.
- GLIA (Also termed neuroglia)
- The major support cells of the brain. These cells are involved in
the nutrition and maintenance of the nerve cells.
- GLIOMA - A tumor formed
by glial cells.
- GLIOBLASTOMA - A rapidly
growing tumor composed of primitive glial cells, mainly arising from
astrocytes.
- GLOBUS PALLIDUS - part of
the basal ganglia which are brain cells that lie deep in the brain.
H
- HEMANGIOMA - An aggregation
of multiple, dilated, blood vessels.
- HEMATOMA - A blood clot.
- HEMIANOPIA - Loss of vision
of one-half of the visual field.
- HEMIATROPHY - Atrophy of
half of an organ or half of the body.
- HEMIPLEGIA - Paralysis of
one side of the body.
- HEMORRHAGE - Bleeding due
to the escape of blood from a blood vessel.
- HERNIATED NUCLEUS PULPOSUS
(HNP) - Extrusion of the central portion of an intervertebral disc through
the outer cartilaginous ring. The material can compress the spinal cord
or nerves in or exiting the spinal canal.
- HORMONE - A chemical substance
formed in one gland or part of the body and carried by the blood to
another organ which it stimulates to functional activity.
- HYDROCEPHALUS - A condition,
often congenital, marked by abnormal and excessive accumulation of cerebrospinal
fluid in the cerebral ventricles. This dilates the ventricles and in
infants and young children causes the head to enlarge.
- HYDROMYELIA - Expansion
of the spinal cord due to increased size of the central canal of the
cord which is filled with CSF.
- HYPERACUSIS - Abnormal acuteness
of hearing or auditory sensation.
- HYPERESTHESIA - Excessive
sensibility to touch, pain or other stimuli.
- HYPERTENSION - High blood
pressure
- HYPOTHALAMUS - A collection
of specialized nerve cells at the base of the brain which controls the
anterior and posterior pituitary secretions, and is involved in other
basic regulatory functions such as temperature control and attention.
I
- INFUNDIBULUM - A stalk extending
from the base of the brain to the pituitary gland.
- INTRA-AORTIC BALLOON COUNTER
PULSATION DEVICE - a pump which is inserted into the main vessel of
the body, the aorta, to help the heart deliver blood to critical organs
such as the brain or kidneys.
- INTRA-ARTERIAL CATHETERIZATION
ANGIOGRAPHY - An invasive study in which a catheter (a small tube) is
placed in the artery and contrast material is injected to which makes
the blood vessels visible on an X-Ray image. The catheter is inserted
in the groin into the femoral artery (the artery to the leg) through
a needle, and is guided into the arteries in the neck and head. This
study is associated with a very small (less than 0.05 % chance of serious
complications) and requires the patient to lie in bed for approximately
six hours to allow the leg vessel to heal.
- INTRACEREBRAL HEMATOMA -
A blood clot within the brain.
- INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE (ICP)
- The overall pressure inside the skull.
- INTRAOPERATIVE CISTERNOGRAPHY
- administration of a contrast dye into the ventricles which are chambers
in the brain that contain brain fluid
- ISCHEMIA - Inadequate circulation
of blood generally due to a blockage of an artery.
J
- JUGULAR VEINS - The major
veins on each side of the neck draining blood from the head towards
the heart.
K
- KYPHOPLASTY - A minimally
invasive procedure for pathologic compression fractures that can restore
the normal anatomical alignment, solidify the soft, fractured bone,
and alleviate pain.
L
- LABYRINTH - The internal
ear, comprising the semi-circular canals, vestibule and cochlea.
- LAMINA - The flattened or
arched part of the vertebral arch, forming the roof of the spinal canal.
- LAMINECTOMY - Excision of
one or more laminae of the vertebrae.
- LAMINOTOMY - An opening
made in a lamina.
- LEPTOMENINGES - Two thin
layers of fine tissue covering the brain and spinal cord (The pia mater
and arachnoid).
- LEPTOMENINGITIS - Inflammation
of the membranes covering the brain and spinal cord.
- LEUKODYSTROPHY - Disturbance
of the white matter of the brain.
- LEUKOENCEPHALITIS - An inflammation
of the white matter of the brain.
- LINEAR ACCELERATOR - Equipment
that precisely delivers a concentrated dose of radiation to a predetermined
target using x-rays.
- LIPOMA - A benign fatty
tumor, usually composed of mature fat cells.
- LORDOSIS - Curvature of
the spine with the convexity forward.
- LUMBAR DRAIN - A device
(usually a long, thin, flexible tube) inserted through the skin into
the cerebrospinal fluid space of the lower back; provides a method of
draining cerebrospinal fluid.
M
- MAGNETIC RESONANCE ANGIOGRAPHY
(MRA) - A non-invasive study which is conducted in a Magnetic Resonance
Imager (MRI). The magnetic ../images are assembled by a computer to
provide an image of the arteries in the head and neck. No contrast material
is needed, but some patients may experience claustrophobia in the imager.
- MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
(MRI) - Diagnostic test that produces three-dimensional ../images of
body structures using powerful magnets and computer technology rather
than x-rays.
- MEDIAN NERVE - The nerve
formed from the brachial plexus that supplies muscles in the anterior
forearm and thumb, as well as, sensation of the hand. It may be compressed
or trapped at the wrist in carpal tunnel syndrome.
- MEDULLOBLASTOMA - Tumor
composed of medulloblasts which are cells which develop in the roof
of the fourth ventricle (medullary velum).
- MENINGES - The three membranes
covering the spinal cord and brain termed dura mater, arachnoid mater
and pia mater.
- MENINGIOMA - A firm, often
vascular, tumor arising from the coverings of the brain.
- MENINGITIS - An infection
or inflammation of the membranes covering the brain and spinal cord.
- MENINGOCELE - A protrusion
of the coverings of the spinal cord or brain through a defect in the
skull or vertebral column.
- MENINGOENCEPHALITIS - An
inflammation or infection of the brain and meninges.
- MENINGOENCEPHALOCELE - A
protrusion of both the meninges and brain tissue through a skull defect.
- MRA - Magnetic Resonance
Angiography. A non-invasive study which is conducted in a Magnetic Resonance
Imager (MRI). The magnetic ../images are assembled by a computer to
provide an image of the arteries in the head and neck. No contrast material
is needed, but some patients may experience claustrophobia in the imager.
- MRI - Magnetic Resonance
Imaging - Scanning technique for views of the brain or spinal cord.
No radiation is involved, but rather pulsed magnetic waves are used
to delineate the structures within the brain.
- MYELIN - The fat-like substance
which surrounds the axon of nerve fibers and forms an insulating material.
- MYELOGRAM - An x-ray of
the spinal canal following injection of a contrast material into the
surrounding cerebrospinal fluid spaces.
- MYELOPATHY - Any functional
or pathologic disturbance in the spinal cord.
- MYELOMENINGOCELE - A protrusion
of the spinal cord and its coverings through a defect in the vertebral
column.
- MYOPATHY - Any disease of
muscle.
N
- NEURALGIA - A paroxysmal
pain extending along the course of one or more nerves.
- NEURECTOMY - Excision of
part of a nerve.
- NEURITIS - Inflammation
of a nerve; may also be used to denote non-inflammatory nerve lesions
of the peripheral nervous system.
- NEUROBLASTOMA - Tumor of
sympathetic nervous system origin, found mostly in infants and children.
- NEUROFIBROMA - A tumor of
the peripheral nerves due to an abnormal collection of fibrous and insulating
cells.
- NEUROFIBROMATOSIS - A familial
condition characterized by developmental changes in the nervous system,
muscles and skin, marked by numerous tumors affecting these organ system.
- NEUROHYPOPHYSIS - The posterior
lobe of the pituitary gland.
- NEUROLYSIS - Removal of
scar or reactive tissue from a nerve or nerve root.
- NEUROMA - A tumor or new
growth largely made up of nerve fibers and connective tissue.
- NEUROPATHY - Any functional
or pathologic disturbance in the peripheral nervous system.
- NYSTAGMUS - Involuntary
rapid movement of the eyes in the horizontal, vertical or rotary planes
of the eyeball.
O
- OCCIPUT - The back part
of the head.
- OLIGODENDROGLIA - Non-nerve
cells, (see glia) forming part of the supporting structure of the central
nervous system.
- OLIGODENDROGLIOMA - A growth
of new cells derived from the oligodendroglia.
- OPHTHALMOPLEGIA - Paralysis
of one or more of the eye muscles.
- OSTEOMA - A benign tumor
of bone.
- OSTEOMYELITIS - Inflammation
of bone due to infection, which may be localized or generalized.
- OSTEOPOROSIS - A condition
whereby the bones become soft and fragile, significantly increasing
the risk of spine, hip, and other fractures.
P
- PAPILLEDEMA - Swelling of
the optic nerve head, can be seen in the back of the retina during eye
examination.
- PARAPLEGIA - Paralysis of
the lower part of the body including the legs. PERITONEAL CAVITY - Body
cavity in which the abdominal organs are situated.
- PITUITARY- Gland at base
of the brain which secretes hormones into the blood stream. Those hormones
then regulate other glands including the thyroid, adrenals and gonads.
The "Master Gland".
- POLYNEURITIS - Inflammation
of two or more nerves simultaneously.
- PORENCEPHALY - Abnormal
cavity within brain tissue, usually resulting from outpouching of a
lateral ventricle.
- POST-ICTAL - State following
a seizure, often characterized by altered function of the limbs and/or
mentation.
- PROPRIOCEPTION - Sensation
concerning movements of joints and position of the body in space.
- PSEUDOTUMOR CEREBRI - Raised
intracranial pressure, usually causing only headache and papilledema.
No clear underlying structural abnormality.
- PUPIL - The black part of
the eye through which light enters; enlarges in dim light and decreases
in size in bright light.
Q
- QUADRANTANOPIA - Defect
in vision or blindness in one fourth of the visual field.
- QUADRIPLEGIA - Paralysis
of all four limbs.
R
- RACHISCHISIS - Abnormal
congenital opening of the vertebral column.
- RADIATION ONCOLOGIST - A
medical doctor who has received advanced training in the treatment of
persons receiving x-ray treatment for an illness.
- RADIATION PHYSICIST - A
person having a PhD degree who is trained in the science dealing with
the properties, changes and interactions of continous energy.
- RADIOLOGIST - A medical
doctor who has received specialized training in interpreting x-rays,
CTs, MRI's and performing angiography.
- RADIOTHERAPY - Treatment
of a lesion with radiation.
S
- SACCULAR ANEURYSM - a balloon-like
outpouching of a vessel (the more common type of aneurysm).
- SCOTOMA - An area of decreased
vision surrounded by an area of less depressed or normal vision.
- SHUNT - A tube or device
implanted in the body (usually made of Silastic) to redivert excess
CSF away from the brain to another place in the body.
- SPINA BIFIDA - A congenital
defect of the spine marked by the absence of a portion of the spine.
- SPINAL FUSION - Operative
method of strengthening and limiting motion of the spinal column. Can
be performed with a variety of metal instruments and bone grafts, or
bone grafts alone.
- SPONDYLOLISTHESIS - Forward
displacement of one vertebra on another.
- SPONDYLOSIS - Degenerative
bone changes in the spine usually most marked at the vertebral joints.
- STENOSIS - Narrowing.
- STEREOTACTIC - Originated
from the Greek words stereo meaning three dimensional and tactos meaning
touched.
- STEREOTACTIC RADIOSURGERY
- The precise delivery of radiation to a preselected stereotactically
localized target.
- STRABISMUS - Deviation of
eye movement which prevents the two eyes from moving in a parallel fashion.
- SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE
- Blood in, or bleeding into, the space under the arachnoid membrane,
most commonly from trauma or from rupture of an aneurysm.
- SUBDURAL HEMATOMA - a collection
of blood (clot) trapped under the dura matter, the outermost membrane
surrounding the brain and spinal cord.
- SYRINGOMYELIA - A fluid
filled cavity in the spinal cord.
T
- TERATOMA - tumor or growth
made up of several different types of tissue (fat, bone, muscle, skin).
- THROMBUS - A blood clot
attached to the wall of an artery.
- THALAMUS - brain cells which
lie in the upper part of the brainstem.
- TIC DOULOUREUX - (See trigeminal
neuralgia)
- TRANSSPHENOIDAL APPROACH
- Operative method of reaching the pituitary gland or skull base traversing
the nose and sinuses.
- TRIGEMINAL NEURALGIA - Paroxysmal
pain in the face. Pain may be so severe that it causes an involuntary
grimace or "tic". (Tic Douloureux)
U
- ULTRASOUND - The use of
high-frequency sound to create ../images of internal body structures.
V
- VALVE - Device placed in
a shunt system to regulate the rate and direction of CSF flow.
- VASOCONSTRICTION - A decrease
in the diameter of blood vessels.
- VASODILATATION - An increase
in the diameter of blood vessels.
- VASOPRESSIN - A hormone
secreted by the hypothalamus and stored in the posterior pituitary which
raises blood pressure and increases reabsorption of water by the kidneys.
- VASOPRESSOR - An agent which
constricts the arteries and raises blood pressure.
- VASOSPASM - Spasm of blood
vessels, decreasing their diameter.
- VENTRICLE - The cavities
or chambers within the brain which contain the cerebrospinal fluid.
There are two lateral ventricles and midline third and fourth ventricles.
- VENTRICULITIS - Inflammation
and/or infection of the ventricles.
- VENTRICULOGRAM - An X-ray
study of the ventricles.
- VENTRICULOSTOMY - An opening
into the ventricles of the brain, such as by inserting a small, thin,
hollow catheter.
- VENTRICULAR DRAINAGE - Insertion
of a small tube into the ventricles to drain cerebrospinal fluid, usually
when pressure is increased.
- VERMIS - Middle part of
the cerebellum between the two hemispheres.
- VERTEBRA- Any of the thirty-three
bones of the spinal column.
- VERTIGO - An abnormal sensation
of rotation or movement of one's self, or the environment.
X
- X-RAY - Application of electromagnetic
radiation to produce a film or picture of a bone or soft-tissue area
of the body.
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