Results 321 to 330 of about 103,722 (368)
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OPTIC NYSTAGMUS: TECHNICAL INTRODUCTION, WITH OBSERVATIONS IN A CASE WITH CENTRAL SCOTOMA IN THE RIGHT EYE AND EXTERNAL RECTUS PALSY IN THE LEFT EYE

, 1928
Although the ocular nystagmus resulting from watching moving objects has been recognized for many years, it has not received the scientific attention comparable to the intensive investigation, both clinical and experimental, that has been accorded the ...
R. Dodge, J. C. Fox
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POSITIONAL NYSTAGMUS

Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, 1975
Positional nystagmus may be persistent or transitory. Of the persistent forms, type I refers to nystagmus changing direction in different head positions and type II to nystagmus beating in a single direction. Both types may denote either peripheral or central abnormality.
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Treatment of Nystagmus

Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 2011
Patients with congenital and acquired forms of nystagmus are commonly encountered in clinical practice. Many report visual symptoms, such as oscillopsia and blurred vision, which can be alleviated if the nystagmus can be suppressed. Pharmacologic, optical, and surgical treatments are available, with the choice of treatment depending on the ...
Matthew J. Thurtell, R. John Leigh
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Nystagmus

1984
Publisher Summary The identification and characterization of nystagmus can be crucial in making both anatomical and pathological neurological diagnoses. Nystagmus is a to-and-fro oscillation of the eyes, the velocity of the movement being either equal in the two phases (pendular nystagmus, usually due to poor vision) or different with a slow and a ...
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Nystagmus und Nystagmus-Neigung

Archiv für Ohren-, Nasen- und Kehlkopfheilkunde, 1936
Vestibuli~rer rhythmischer Rucknystagmus ( = Ruck-Ny) beim Blick geradeaus ist bekanntlich naeh den heutigen Ansehauungen ein wichtiges Zeichen einer Labyrinthdekompensation. Er weist auf Tonusuntersehiede im Vestibularsystem der beiden Seiten hin und ist daher, wie lVrenzel mit Recht betont, in auch noch so geringer St/~rke Ms ein organisch bedingtes ...
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Acquired nystagmus

Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 1999
Patients with acquired forms of nystagmus may suffer from oscillopsia and blurred vision; abolishing or reducing nystagmus ameliorates these symptoms. Ideally, treatment of nystagmus should be directed against the pathophysiologic mechanism responsible.
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Treatment of Nystagmus

Seminars in Neurology, 2015
Acquired and congenital forms of nystagmus are commonly encountered in the course of clinical practice. Although some patients are asymptomatic, many others describe disabling oscillopsia that impairs visual function, social function, and quality of life. Such patients may present to the neurologist to request treatment.
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Nystagmus

International Ophthalmology Clinics, 1978
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The Mechanism of Nystagmus

Acta Oto-Laryngologica, 1962
In six persons with spontaneous vertical nystagmus behind closed eyes, concurrent horizontal nystagmus was induced by caloric irrigation of the horizontal semicircular canals in the vertical position. This procedure caused no change in the vertical nystagmus pattern. When the horizontal nystagmus subsided, the number of eye movements decreased, whereas
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