It appears as a symmetrical, walnut-shaped structure with well-defined borders and intermediate signal intensity, occupying about 15% of the central pelvic MRI image.
It looks like an oval gland with smooth contours and a homogenous gray tone, located in the lower central part of the image between the bladder and rectum.
It is a compact, rounded organ with a finely granular texture and a slightly brighter signal than the surrounding tissues, spanning approximately one-sixth of the image area.
It appears as a bilateral, lobulated mass with clear margins and mixed signal intensities, situated centrally and covering around 12% of the image.
It looks like a moderately sized gland with a hypointense capsule and heterogeneous internal texture, occupying the mid-pelvic region of the MRI scan.
It is an elliptical structure with uniform gray intensity and smooth outer edges, located just inferior to the bladder and taking up about 10% of the image.
It appears as a dense, bean-shaped organ with speckled signal variation and sharp contrast with adjacent fat and muscle tissues, positioned centrally in the lower image quadrant.
It looks like a slightly asymmetric mass with coarse internal texture and lobular boundaries, spanning roughly 14% of the image width.
It is a medium-sized gland with low to intermediate intensity and a homogeneous texture, surrounded by a hypointense rim, centered between the rectum and pubic bone.
It appears as a well-circumscribed organ with a smooth capsule and subtle internal zonal differentiation, occupying the central pelvic area and covering one-eighth of the image.
