Dear Pokey:
It depends on how you define spinal lesions. If you mean the entire spinal column and it's contents, then lesion can be in the cord itself, vertebral column, within the canal but outside the cord, or in the foramen. If you mean only the spinal cord, then the answer is still no, because the lesion can be in the center or canal space, in the white matter, or in the gray matter. Yes, as anything, the resolution of the MRI predicts the resolution of the detection size.
Sincerely,
CCF Neuro MD
I appologize, I should have been more specific in my question.
I was wondering if demyelinating lesions can be anywhere in the cord. Not just location (cervical, thoracic), but more if they can be anterior, posterior or smack dab in the middle. I was told they are always in the center of the cord by radiologist, but neurologist disagreed. What is your opinion?
Thanks