See also: Lacuna Lacunae Lacunar Lagune Lacunose Lacunarity Lacustrine Lacustre
1. A Lacune is a type of small stroke that occurs when someone has hypertension or another type of small vessel disease, and an "infarct," or death, occurs within the vessel, according to …
Lacune
2. The terms “Lacune”, “lacunar infarct” and “lacunar stroke” are often used interchangeably, but they are not the same thing
Lacune, Lacunar
3. Lacunes are 3 to 15 mm cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-filled cavities in the basal ganglia or white matter, frequently observed coincidentally on imaging in older people, often not clearly associated with discrete neurological symptoms.
Lacunes
4. Lacune is a Latin term that indicates a hole, as stated in the first description by Miller Fisher with pathologic specimens
Lacune, Latin
5. Lacunes have been historically considered the first SVD feature ( Fisher, 1991 ) and are one of the etiology subtypes of ischemic stroke.
Lacunes
6. Lacune translate: gap in one’s knowledge
Lacune
7. Such a small area of brain destruction is called a Lacune
Lacune
8. Lacune definition: a gap or space Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples
Lacune
9. Lacune (plural Lacunes) A lacunar stroke or infarct.
Lacune, Lacunes, Lacunar
10. Lacune translation in French - French Reverso dictionary, see also 'combler une Lacune',lacaune',Lacuneux',lucane', examples, definition, conjugation
Lacune, Lacaune, Lacuneux, Lucane
11. La Lacune cruciale qui a bénéficié d'une attention plus soutenue concerne les capacités
La, Lacune, Les
12. Cette Lacune est source d'incertitude
Lacune
13. De nombreuses personnes ont signalé cette grave Lacune
Lacune
14. Entre-temps, cette Lacune de sécurité persiste
Lacune
15. The term Lacune was first introduced in 1843 by M
Lacune
16. Tharoor's choice of words ranging from 'puerile' (silly or immature), ' Lacune ' (an unfilled space), arcana (secrets) and 'frisson' (sudden feeling of excitement or fear) amongst others, have left the people in splits.
Lacune, Left
17. " What Is a Lacune?." Stroke, 39(11), pp
Lacune
18. Definition of Lacune in the Definitions.net dictionary
Lacune
19. What does Lacune mean? Information and translations of Lacune in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on …
Lacune
20. In a monoparetic stroke, the most frequent stroke subtype was cardioembolism (38.7%), followed by LAD (29.0%), cryptogenic stroke (12.9%), Lacune (9.7%), and two or more mechanisms (9.7%, cardioembolism and LAD); most patients had nonlacunar strokes (90.3%).
Lad, Lacune
21. Finding on brain MRI: A Lacune is a small fluid collection in the brain
Lacune
22. Small collections of cerebral spinal fluid near the base of the brain are sometimes mistakenly called Lacunes.
Lacunes
23. Lacune locations were correlated with neuropsychological results
Lacune, Locations
24. Markus 2014 , ' Strategic Lacunes and their relationship to cognitive impairment in cerebral small vessel disease', NeuroImage
Lacunes
25. Other articles where Cerebral Lacune is discussed: stroke: Types and symptoms: …wither, creating minute holes, called Lacunes
Lacune, Lacunes
26. The lacunar hypothesis proposes that (1) symptomatic Lacunes present with distinctive lacunar syndromes and (2) a Lacune is due to occlusion of a single, deep penetrating artery generated by a specific vascular pathology
Lacunar, Lacunes, Lacune
27. The above concept is controversial, because different definitions of Lacunes have been used.
Lacunes
28. Cette Lacune se traduit par l'absence de liens entre les sous-projets et les partenaires locaux
Lacune, Liens, Les, Locaux
29. La principale Lacune de nos connaissances concerne l'impact des entreprises étrangères existantes dans la région.
La, Lacune
30. French Cette disposition pourrait combler une Lacune et clarifier un point qui, comme vous l’avez fait remarquer vous-même, n’a pas été bien intégré
Lacune
31. Plural of Lacune··Plural form of Lacune Definition from Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Lacune
32. Synonyms for Lacune in Free Thesaurus
Lacune
33. Le Lacune evidenziate sono sostanzialmente note da tempo
Le, Lacune
34. Tuttavia, entrambe le iniziative presentano numerose limitazioni e Lacune .
Le, Limitazioni, Lacune
35. What does Lacune mean? A lacuna
Lacune, Lacuna
36. (noun) Words near Lacune in the Dictionary
Lacune
37. English words for combler une Lacune include bridge, stop a gap and make up a deficiency
Lacune
38. Cette Lacune ne reduit cependant en rien la pertinence d'un tel ouvrage qui saura a coup sur interesser tout lecteur desirant creuser la question des relations etablies entre les Autochtones et L'Etat canadien.
Lacune, La, Lecteur, Les
39. The term Lacune (“hole” in Latin) was first used by French neurologists in the initial part of the nineteenth century, Dechambre [3] and Durand-Fardel [4], who described small cavities within
Lacune, Latin
40. The notion that Lacunes occur haphazardly is criticized because the first or only Lacune tends to be symptomatic
Lacunes, Lacune
41. The incidence of cerebral Lacunes has declined since the introduction of antihypertensive therapy, an indication that therapy is effective.
Lacunes
42. Background and purpose: To compare the risk factors and risk of stroke between Lacune and large perivascular spaces (PVSs) in a community-based sample
Lacune, Large
43. The relationship between cardiovascular risk factors, neuroimaging changes, and incidental stroke risk and the presence of Lacune …
Lacune
LACUNE [ləˈk(y)o͞onə]
Definition of lacuna. 1 : a blank space or a missing part : gap the evident lacunae in his story— Shirley Hazzard also : deficiency sense 1 despite all these lacunae, those reforms were a vast improvement — New Republic. 2 : a small cavity, pit, or discontinuity in an anatomical structure.
In histology, a lacuna is a small space containing an osteocyte in bone or chondrocyte in cartilage.
) "blank or missing portion in a manuscript," 1660s, from Latin lacuna "hole, pit," figuratively "a gap, void, want," diminutive of lacus "pond, lake; hollow, opening" (see lake (n.1)). The Latin plural is lacunae. The word has also been used in English from c. 1700 in the literal Latin sense in anatomy, zoology, botany.
noun lacunae, lacunas. 1 An unfilled space; a gap. 'the journal has filled a lacuna in Middle Eastern studies'. More example sentences. 'Thus, divergent growth apparently prompted offsetting, in order for the coral to maintain the lacuna and occupy the space around it.'.