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lesioncontaining

Lesioncontaining is a term used in medical writing to describe a specimen, organ, or region that contains one or more lesions. It functions as an attributive adjective, indicating the presence of abnormal tissue within a larger context, rather than specifying the exact pathology of the lesions. While not a standardized entry in medical nomenclature, it can appear in reports, notes, or discussions to emphasize inclusion of lesion tissue.

In pathology, a lesion-containing biopsy specimen may be described to signal that the submitted tissue includes

Usage and style notes: the form is not universally standardized, and hyphenated versions like lesion-containing or

See also: multifocal lesions, lesion-bearing, focal lesion, pathology reporting.

lesion
tissue
alongside
surrounding
normal
tissue,
which
can
influence
diagnostic
interpretation.
In
radiology
and
clinical
practice,
phrases
such
as
“a
lesion-containing
liver”
or
“an
organ
containing
multiple
focal
lesions”
may
be
used
to
summarize
imaging
findings
where
abnormalities
are
present
within
an
organ
but
not
fully
characterized
by
the
report
itself.
more
descriptive
alternatives
such
as
lesion-bearing
or
multifocal
lesions
are
common.
Because
the
expression
provides
limited
detail
about
the
lesions,
most
writers
prefer
direct
descriptions
of
lesion
number,
size,
distribution,
and
imaging
or
histopathologic
characteristics.