Results 191 to 200 of about 43,939 (232)
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Extraocular Muscle Lacerations

American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1976
Five cases of laceration of an extraocular muscle without involvement of the globe or significant involvement of the adnexa occurred after injury with a pencil, mower blade, screen door, and building nail, and at surgery when the surgeon operated on the wrong muscle.
E M, Helveston, R D, Grossman
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Extraocular Motoneurons and Neurotrophism

2022
Extraocular motoneurons are located in three brainstem nuclei: the abducens, trochlear and oculomotor. They control all types of eye movements by innervating three pairs of agonistic/antagonistic extraocular muscles. They exhibit a tonic-phasic discharge pattern, demonstrating sensitivity to eye position and sensitivity to eye velocity.
Angel M, Pastor   +2 more
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Extraocular Muscle Transplantation

Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus, 1977
1. The transplantation of extraocular homografts in dogs and humans has been described. 2. The extraocular muscle tissue transplanted remains viable, but loses its characteristics of muscle tissue during the period of the normal healing process following extraocular muscle surgery. 3.
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Disinserted Extraocular Muscles

American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1975
In two patients, a muscle that slipped from the globe posteriorly created the clinical pattern of reduced rotation amplitude, reduced saccadic velocity, reduced active force, and increasing exophthalmos with gaze into the field of action of the muscle.
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Management of Extraocular Infections

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 2017
Extraocular infection is a frequently encountered problem in children including neonates and infants. Prompt recognition of the extraocular disease and management at first contact reduces the ocular morbidity and visual impairment. Delay in administering appropriate therapy and referral to an eye care personnel may result in blindness; sometimes ...
Srinivasan, Muthiah   +1 more
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Canine Bilateral Extraocular Polymyositis

Veterinary Pathology, 1989
This paper reports a bilateral polymyositis restricted to extraocular muscles, a pathologic change not previously reported in dogs. Two unrelated dogs manifested a distinctive syndrome of acute bilateral exophthalmos with extraocular myositis, confirmed either by surgical biopsy or by necropsy.
J L, Carpenter   +5 more
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Proprioception in Extraocular Muscle

Archives of Ophthalmology, 1963
The term proprioception was introduced by Sherrington in 1906. 1 He defined it as a reflex system for the maintenance of body position and coordination of movement, and the means whereby one is conscious of body position. 2,3 The purpose of this paper is to review the anatomical and neurophysiological evidence for proprioception in extraocular muscle ...
E H, CHRISTMAN, C, KUPFER
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Intraocular and Extraocular Retinoblastoma

Hematology/Oncology Clinics of North America, 1987
Retinoblastoma, the most common primary ocular malignancy of childhood, is a tumor in which the pediatrician and pediatric oncologist can now play a much more significant role in therapy. Developments in molecular biology have now made carrier testing and prenatal diagnosis feasible.
E F, Grabowski, D H, Abramson
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