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GlossaryLesion

Lesion — What It Means on Your Imaging Report

Quick Answer

A lesion is any area of abnormal tissue found on a medical imaging scan — it does not automatically mean cancer. The word simply tells your doctor that something looks different from the surrounding healthy tissue.

What Is a Lesion?

In radiology, "lesion" is one of the broadest terms a doctor can use. It describes any area of tissue that appears different from normal on an imaging scan. A lesion can be as harmless as a small scar or as significant as a tumor — the word itself carries no judgment about severity.

Think of it like the word "spot" in everyday language. If someone says there is a spot on your shirt, you do not know whether it is a coffee stain or a hole until you look more closely. Similarly, a lesion is the starting point for further investigation, not a final answer.

Radiologists use the term because it is precise without being premature. Rather than guessing what an abnormality is before all the evidence is in, they describe it neutrally and recommend the next steps.

When You Might See This on Your Report

You may encounter the word "lesion" on virtually any type of imaging report:

  • MRI reports — brain lesions, spinal lesions, liver lesions
  • CT scans — lung lesions, kidney lesions, bone lesions
  • Ultrasound — liver lesions, thyroid lesions, breast lesions
  • X-rays — bone lesions, lung lesions

The term appears across all imaging modalities because it is a general descriptor, not specific to one technology.

Should I Be Worried?

In most cases, a lesion is not an emergency. The majority of lesions found on routine imaging turn out to be benign (non-cancerous). Common benign lesions include cysts (fluid-filled sacs), hemangiomas (clusters of blood vessels), and areas of old scarring.

However, the word does signal that your doctor needs more information. Depending on the lesion's size, shape, location, and how it appears on the scan, your radiologist may recommend:

  • Additional imaging (such as a follow-up MRI with contrast)
  • Comparison with prior scans to check for changes
  • A biopsy in some cases

The key takeaway: "lesion" is a description, not a diagnosis. Your doctor will determine the next steps based on the full clinical picture.

What Should I Do Next?

  1. Read the full Impression section of your report — the radiologist's summary will explain whether the lesion is likely benign or needs further investigation.
  2. Schedule a follow-up appointment with the doctor who ordered the scan. They can explain the findings in the context of your medical history.
  3. Ask your doctor whether any additional imaging or monitoring is recommended.
  4. Do not self-diagnose based on the word "lesion" alone — it is too broad a term to draw conclusions from without expert interpretation.

Related Terms

Nodule

A nodule is a small, rounded growth found on imaging — most nodules, especially small ones, are benign and require only routine monitoring.

CTX-rayUltrasoundMRI

Mass

A mass is a lump or growth larger than 3 cm seen on imaging — it can be benign or malignant and usually requires further evaluation.

CTMRIUltrasoundMammogramX-ray

Tumor

A tumor is an abnormal mass of tissue that can be benign (non-cancerous) or malignant (cancerous) — imaging alone cannot always tell the difference.

MRICTUltrasoundX-ray

Cyst

A cyst is a fluid-filled sac that appears on imaging — the vast majority of cysts are benign and do not require treatment.

UltrasoundCTMRIMammogram

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Medical Disclaimer

This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional regarding any medical condition or questions about your imaging results.

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