Definition of Lesion
Lesion: Pronounced "lee-sion" with the emphasis on
the "lee," a lesion can be almost any abnormality involving any
tissue or organ due to any disease or any injury.
There are, not surprisingly, many types of lesions. There are also a number of different ways of classifying and naming lesions.
Lesions can, for instance, be categorized according to whether or not they are caused by cancer. A benign lesion is non-cancerous whereas a
malignant lesion is cancerous. For example, a biopsy of a skin lesion
may prove it to be benign or malignant, or evolving into a malignant
lesion (called a premalignant lesion).
Lesions can be defined according to the patterns they form. For
example, a bull's-eye or target lesion is one that looks like the
bull's eye on a target. (In an X-ray of the duodenum, a bull's-eye
lesion can represent a tumor with an ulcer (crater) in the center.) A
coin lesion is a round shadow resembling a coin on a chest X-ray. It,
too, is usually due to a tumor.
Lesions can be named for persons who first described them. For
instance, a Ghon lesion (or Ghon focus) is the scar-like "signature"
in the lungs of adults left by tuberculosis in childhood.
Lesions can also be categorized by their size. A gross lesion is
one that can be seen with the naked eye. A microscopic or histologic
lesion requires the magnification of a microscope to be seen. The
basis of sickle cell disease is a molecular lesion, one that is not
even visible with a microscope but is only detectable on the
molecular (protein or DNA) level.
Location is another basis for naming lesions. In neurology, a
central lesion involves the brain or spinal cord, i.e., the central
nervous system. A peripheral lesion involves the nerves away from the
spinal cord and does not involve the central nervous system.
There is a virtually endless assortment of lesions in medicine:
primary lesions, secondary lesions, impaction lesions, indiscriminate
lesions, irritative lesions, etc. Many are named for people including
the Armanni-Ebstein lesion, a Bankart lesion, a Blumenthal lesion,
and so on.
The word "lesion" comes from the Latin noun "laesio" meaning "an
attack or injury" which is related in Latin to the verb "laedere" =
"to hurt, strike or wound."
Last Editorial Review: 1/28/2001
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