Results 211 to 220 of about 25,200 (252)

Optic disc drusen.

open access: yesJournal of postgraduate medicine, 2004
N, Dhingra, S, Prasad
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[Optic nerve drusen].

open access: yesAnales de pediatria (Barcelona, Spain : 2003), 2017
E, Santos-Bueso   +3 more
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Glycoproteins of drusen and drusen-like lesions

Journal of Molecular Histology, 2007
Abstract Purpose: Drusen are a marker of age‐related macular degeneration. Lesions similar to drusen, both in histology and their clinical appearance are also seen in choroidal tumours, chronic inflammatory and degenerative conditions of the eye, and in mesangiocapillary glomerulonephritis type II (MCGN‐II).
D'Souza, Yvonne   +2 more
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Optic disc drusen

The Lancet, 2003
85 Parle JV, Maisonneuve P, Sheppard MC, Boyle P, Franklyn JA. Prediction of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in elderly people from one low serum thyrotropin result: a 10-year cohort study. Lancet 2001; 358: 861–65. 86 Mitsiades N, Poulaki V, Mitsiades CS, Koutras DA, Chrousos GP.
Poorna, Abeysiri   +2 more
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Optic Nerve Drusen

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1973
Two case reports, one clinical and the other pathologic, illustrate important features of optic nerve drusen. A clinical subject demonstrates that optic nerve drusen cause visual field defects and central visual loss in childhood. Another case, studied postmortem, illustrates optic atrophy caused by drusen.
D F, Kamin, R S, Hepler, R Y, Foos
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Optic Disk Drusen

Survey of Ophthalmology, 2002
Optic disk drusen occur in 3.4 to 24 per 1,000 population and are bilateral in approximately 75%. Disturbance in the axonal metabolism in the presence of a small scleral canal--regardless of eyelength--is considered responsible for the development. The drusen increase in size, becoming more visible with age due to continuing calcium apposition, and ...
Auw-Hädrich, Claudia   +2 more
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Bilateral Confluent Drusen

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1962
In the first case of this paper, extensive bilateral confluent drusen * of the kind seen in Doyne's honeycombed choroiditis are found related to an old choroiditis. A second case with bilateral confluent drusen in choroidal involvement in chronic granulocytic leukemia is briefly described.
J R, WOLTER, H F, FALLS
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DRUSEN AND DRUSEN

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1962
To the Editor: —In an otherwise excellent article on electron microscopy of the limiting membrane of the retina and pigment epithelium, Fine (Arch. Ophthal.66:847, 1961) uses the umlaut word drusen. This is the plural of the German word Druse which means a gland.
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