Results 301 to 310 of about 31,224 (320)
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1986
To the Editor. —In the June issue of theArchives, Miller 1 presented photographic documentation of the appearance of optic disc drusen in a patient who initially had anomalously elevated discs without visible drusen. Such a patient has previously been presented with photographs by Huber in Fig 2-38 of the third edition of his book Eye Signs and ...
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To the Editor. —In the June issue of theArchives, Miller 1 presented photographic documentation of the appearance of optic disc drusen in a patient who initially had anomalously elevated discs without visible drusen. Such a patient has previously been presented with photographs by Huber in Fig 2-38 of the third edition of his book Eye Signs and ...
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1935
The presence of hyaline bodies, called by the GermansDrusenbildungen, or granular formations, on the optic disk is rare. Ophthalmoscopically the disk is seen to be swollen, and one may have the impression that the condition is optic neuritis. The swelling may amount to 12 or 14 diopters. The vision is often unimpaired. More careful investigation shows
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The presence of hyaline bodies, called by the GermansDrusenbildungen, or granular formations, on the optic disk is rare. Ophthalmoscopically the disk is seen to be swollen, and one may have the impression that the condition is optic neuritis. The swelling may amount to 12 or 14 diopters. The vision is often unimpaired. More careful investigation shows
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2014
Autosomal dominant drusen is a dominantly inherited maculopathy first described by Doyne in 1899 [1]. The condition is characterised by macular drusen and is associated with slowly progressive loss of central visual acuity. A single heterozygous missense mutation (p.Arg345Trp) in the EFEMP1 (EGF-containing fibulin-like extracellular matrix protein 1 ...
Eva Lenassi+3 more
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Autosomal dominant drusen is a dominantly inherited maculopathy first described by Doyne in 1899 [1]. The condition is characterised by macular drusen and is associated with slowly progressive loss of central visual acuity. A single heterozygous missense mutation (p.Arg345Trp) in the EFEMP1 (EGF-containing fibulin-like extracellular matrix protein 1 ...
Eva Lenassi+3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Archives of Ophthalmology, 1984
To the Editor. —In their article in the MayArchives, Bec et al 1 reported on the identification of optic nerve drusen with computed tomography (CT). This capability is well known. Using this method to detect drusen is not cost-effective (a CT scan costs $300 to $400) and exposes the patient to unnecessary radiation.
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To the Editor. —In their article in the MayArchives, Bec et al 1 reported on the identification of optic nerve drusen with computed tomography (CT). This capability is well known. Using this method to detect drusen is not cost-effective (a CT scan costs $300 to $400) and exposes the patient to unnecessary radiation.
openaire +3 more sources