| 1. | It gives attachment to the anterior sacrococcygeal ligament and the fifth sacral nerve.
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| 2. | These sacrococcygeal teratomas are often relatively amenable to treatment.
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| 3. | They were characterized by elongated distal thoracic vertebrae, lumbar, and proximal sacrococcygeal.
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| 4. | Sacrococcygeal teratoma alone is diagnosed at birth in one out of 40, 000 humans.
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| 5. | In particular, a pilonidal cyst in the gluteal cleft can resemble a sacrococcygeal teratoma.
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| 6. | This short ligament forms the continuation of the anterior longitudinal ligament and stretches over the sacrococcygeal symphysis.
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| 7. | The most notable of these is sacrococcygeal teratoma, the single most common tumor diagnosed in babies at birth.
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| 8. | It is known also as the base or root of the tail, and corresponds to the human sacrococcygeal symphysis.
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| 9. | In neonates, infants, and children younger than 4 years, the majority of germ cell tumors are sacrococcygeal teratomas.
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| 10. | Historically, sacrococcygeal teratomas present in 2 clinical patterns related to the child s age, tumor location, and likelihood of tumor malignancy.
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