Lesion in a sentence as a noun

We'll test your blood for XYZ, maybe biopsy this lesion.

Older surgeries used to do a real lesion near that brain region.

Maybe a brain lesion caused me to skew the concept so that everything would be "left" to me.

[1] If so, perhaps the disruption of integrins is the key lesion.

In most brain studies I read there is a stroke or something like that which causes a lesion in the brain, and the changes came about after this.

A CNN training on patients from Japan should not be expected to work for skin lesions from randomly chosen people in South Africa or Sweden.

Injecting artificially grown brain cells into lesion areas of patients can restore motor function and may soon help heal strokes.

I don't know what the business plan here will ultimately be, but there are apps which charge say $40 for a dermatologist to read a photo of your skin lesion.

There is no widespread clinical use of CNNs for skin lesion diagnosis even at top-tier university hospitals.

She was rushed to a nearby hospital, where she apparently stayed for a couple of days before being diagnosed with a lesion on her brain and eventually put on anti-seizure medications and discharged.

You're a braver person than I if you're willing to treat a likely benign and possibly asymptomatic meningioma without fully investigating the lesion, including rate of progression.

> The idea is that thicker artery walls are associated with heart disease, right?Right, except, if you've every scrubbed in for a carotid endarterectomy, the culprit is a lesion full of cholesterol and inflammation, not a diffuse thickening.> Is there reason to believe the relationship is linear?Well, yes and no.

Lesion definitions

noun

any localized abnormal structural change in a bodily part

noun

an injury to living tissue (especially an injury involving a cut or break in the skin)

See also: wound