Results 171 to 180 of about 2,999 (210)
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Bilateral Homonymous Hemianopia
American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1978Bilateral homonymous hemianopia occurred in 15 patients seen during a four-year period. Persons with this visual deficit had similarly shaped visual field defects on corresponding sides of the vertical midline for each eye, equal visual acuity which is generally normal, and normal pupil and fundus examinations.
E W, Nepple, R E, Appen, J F, Sackett
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Homonymous Hemianopia in Stroke
Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology, 2006Previous reports have suggested that most cases of homonymous hemianopia (HH) are caused by occipital stroke. However, these reports have not always been supported by brain imaging.We reviewed the medical records of all patients seen in our unit between 1989 and 2004 who had HH documented by formal perimetry or confrontation visual fields and had ...
Xiaojun, Zhang +4 more
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HYSTERIC HOMONYMOUS HEMIANOPSIA
The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1922Abstract The case here reported was observed in the Clinic for Neurology, Hospital of the University of Michigan. Its symptoms, history and subsequent course seem fully to justify the diagnosis indicated in the title.
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Homonymous paracentral scotomas
Journal of Neurology, 1987Of 230 patients with homonymous visual field defects of central origin, 3 had paracentral scotomas. All complained of severe photophobia and difficulty in reading. Two patients suspected that the scotoma had developed as a result of glare; the visual disorder resolved in these cases, but persisted in the third patient.
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2019
Homonymous hemianopia is caused by unilateral lesions involving the retrochiasmal visual pathways or primary visual cortex. Common causes of homonymous hemianopia include stroke, tumor, and trauma. In this chapter, we begin by reviewing the clinical features that can help to localize the lesion and determine its cause.
Matthew J. Thurtell, Robert L. Tomsak
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Homonymous hemianopia is caused by unilateral lesions involving the retrochiasmal visual pathways or primary visual cortex. Common causes of homonymous hemianopia include stroke, tumor, and trauma. In this chapter, we begin by reviewing the clinical features that can help to localize the lesion and determine its cause.
Matthew J. Thurtell, Robert L. Tomsak
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1930
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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2012
Homonyms are pairs of words (sometimes three or four words) that sound alike, but have different spellings and meanings, such as “side-sighed,” “bare-bear,” and “seen-scene.” This book has been written not only because homonyms pose a problem for many native speakers of English, but because they are also particularly troublesome for learners of English
Janet Dickey Lein, Elizabeth Berriman
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Homonyms are pairs of words (sometimes three or four words) that sound alike, but have different spellings and meanings, such as “side-sighed,” “bare-bear,” and “seen-scene.” This book has been written not only because homonyms pose a problem for many native speakers of English, but because they are also particularly troublesome for learners of English
Janet Dickey Lein, Elizabeth Berriman
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2011
Homonymous hemianopia is caused by lesions involving the retrochiasmal visual pathways or primary visual cortex. The most common cause of homonymous hemianopia is stroke. We discuss the approach to the patient with homonymous hemianopia, with specific reference to prognosis, implications for driving, and rehabilitation.
Matthew J. Thurtell +2 more
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Homonymous hemianopia is caused by lesions involving the retrochiasmal visual pathways or primary visual cortex. The most common cause of homonymous hemianopia is stroke. We discuss the approach to the patient with homonymous hemianopia, with specific reference to prognosis, implications for driving, and rehabilitation.
Matthew J. Thurtell +2 more
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1936
Since Jackson and Gowers1in 1874 called attention to the importance of perimetry in neurologic examinations, it has been known that changes in the visual fields may supply important information as to the general and, at times, the specific location of a lesion of the brain.
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Since Jackson and Gowers1in 1874 called attention to the importance of perimetry in neurologic examinations, it has been known that changes in the visual fields may supply important information as to the general and, at times, the specific location of a lesion of the brain.
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Unexplained Homonymous Hemianopia
JAMA Ophthalmology, 2016Saranya C, Balasubramaniam, John J, Chen
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