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uptake Grade I Lesion uptake < 80% mediast.
Type I lesion is consistent with the description proposed by Sen et al. [12] for group A injuries.
Most patients had WHO grade I lesion, accounting for 36 (85.7%) patients (Figs. 1j, 2c, 3c, and 5e).
They are classified as a WHO grade I lesion and considered as a meningothelial cell neoplasm that are attached to the surface of the dura mater.
To be classified as a grade I lesion, a subcapsular haematoma must not be associated with parenchymal lacerations and no active contrast material extravasation should be observed; indeed, subcapsular haematomas are often associated with higher grade parenchymal lesions.
The three segmental injuries of the radius included a fractured radial head in one patient (Fig. 2), and a dislocated radial head (Monteggia type I lesion) in two patients, respectively, associated with a distal physeal or metaphyseal fracture.
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Therefore, the presence of an ATP cofactor and its hydrolysis were likely both essential for human T-I lesion repair.
The grading criterion was as follows: grade-0 lesions had no hyperfluorescence, grade-I lesions exhibited hyperfluorescence without leakage, grade-IIA lesions exhibited hyperfluorescence in the early or midtransit images and late leakage.
This observation suggested human MMR enzymes can recognize and process G-I but not A-I, C-I and T-I lesions.
Of the 27 giant cell tumors, 6 were radiographic grade-I lesions, 10 were grade-II, and 11 were grade-III, according to Campanacci et al. (1987).
PIN I lesions have one or two layers of atypical cells.
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