MRI SCAN SACRUM

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MRI SCAN SACRUM
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MRI SCAN SACRUM, in Visit Clinic

An MRI of the sacrum produces detailed images of the lower spine and nearby tissues to find pain causes in Visit Clinic.

centreCentre Visit
SAMPLE TYPE
Tissue
FASTING REQUIRED
No
GENDER
Male/Female
GET REPORTS IN
24 hours
TEST INCLUDED
1
Customers
20K+Customers
Labs
CertifiedLabs
Rating
4.5+Rating
Accuracy
ProvenAccuracy

What is a MRI SCAN SACRUM Test in Visit Clinic?

An MRI scan of the sacrum makes detailed pictures of the tailbone area and nearby tissues. It shows bone, joint surfaces, nerves, discs, ligaments, and nearby soft tissue. This information helps identify fractures, inflammation, infection, tumors, nerve compression, and degenerative changes. Doctors use it when patients have unexplained low back or pelvic pain, numbness, or weakness. It also guides treatment planning and surgery. The scan is painless and does not use X-rays. Contrast dye may be used sometimes to highlight infections or tumors.

MRI SCAN SACRUM Test Preparation in Visit Clinic

No special preparation is required.

MRI SCAN SACRUM Test Parameters in Visit Clinic

The MRI SCAN SACRUM test evaluates various parameters. Here are the main parameters checked:

  • Single test

Why Take a MRI SCAN SACRUM Test in Visit Clinic?

MRI SCAN SACRUM is an imaging study often ordered alone or as part of spinal imaging. Doctors request it for persistent lower back or pelvic pain, trauma, sciatica, or unexplained numbness and weakness. It helps diagnose fractures, sacroiliitis, infections, tumors, metastases, and nerve compression. Abnormal findings can result from injury, arthritis, infection, inflammation, or cancer. Family history of cancer or inflammatory spine disease may make this scan more important.

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Frequently asked questions

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What does an MRI of the sacrum show in Visit Clinic?plus

An MRI of the sacrum shows detailed images of sacral bones, sacroiliac joints, surrounding soft tissues and nerve roots. It detects fractures, bone marrow changes (edema, infection, metastases), tumors, inflammatory or degenerative sacroiliitis, abscesses and post‑operative changes. MRI best identifies soft‑tissue pathology and nerve compression causing radicular pain, helping guide diagnosis and treatment planning.

How long does MRI of sacrum take in Visit Clinic?plus

An MRI of the sacrum typically takes about 20 to 40 minutes, though it can range from 15 up to 60 minutes depending on the complexity, need for contrast injection, and sequences required. Preparation and positioning add extra time; if contrast (gadolinium) is used expect an additional 10–15 minutes. You’ll lie still throughout to ensure clear images.

What is the cost of MRI lumbo sacral spine test in Visit Clinic?plus

Costs vary widely by country and facility. In India a non-contrast lumbosacral MRI typically ranges ₹2,000–₹10,000; in the UK private scans cost about £200–£800 while NHS scans are covered; in the U.S. prices commonly run $400–$3,000+ (higher for hospital billing or contrast-enhanced studies). Additional fees apply for contrast, radiologist report, or urgent appointments.

What is the best imaging for the sacrum in Visit Clinic?plus

For sacrum evaluation, CT provides the best bony detail and is preferred for suspected sacral fractures or complex pelvic trauma. MRI is superior for marrow lesions, occult fractures, infection, tumor, or neural/soft‑tissue assessment. Plain radiographs are a limited initial test; bone scintigraphy can detect occult fractures or metastases when CT/MRI are inconclusive.

Can an MRI show sacral nerve damage in Visit Clinic?plus

MRI can detect many causes of sacral nerve injury — it visualizes the spinal canal, nerve roots, discs, tumors, inflammation, and compression of the sacral plexus. However, MRI shows structural and inflammatory changes, not microscopic or purely functional nerve damage. Electrophysiological tests (EMG/nerve conduction) and clinical evaluation are often needed to confirm nerve fiber injury or dysfunction.

What are the special tests for the sacrum in Visit Clinic?plus

Special sacral/sacroiliac tests commonly include FABER (Patrick) test, Gaenslen’s test, thigh‑thrust (posterior shear), distraction and compression (iliac compression) tests, sacral thrust (anterior sacral springing), Yeoman’s test, Gillet’s (stork) test for SI mobility, and the Fortin finger sign for SI region pain localization. These provocation, mobility, and palpation tests help identify sacral/SI dysfunction.