Results 181 to 190 of about 12,541 (204)
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American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1977
A 21-year-old women developed severe bilateral papilledema during an acute febrile disease. Her optic disk margins were blurred and the disks were elevated up to 5 diopters. Splinter hemorrhages, cotton-wool exudates, cytoid bodies, and sheathing of veins were also present. The pyrexia was caused by murine typhus diagnosed by serologic tests.
Eli Manor+3 more
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A 21-year-old women developed severe bilateral papilledema during an acute febrile disease. Her optic disk margins were blurred and the disks were elevated up to 5 diopters. Splinter hemorrhages, cotton-wool exudates, cytoid bodies, and sheathing of veins were also present. The pyrexia was caused by murine typhus diagnosed by serologic tests.
Eli Manor+3 more
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Syphilitic Meningitis With Papilledema
Southern Medical Journal, 1977Reported is a patient with associated papilledema and syphilitic meningitis. The clinical picture initially suggested an intracranial mass lesion. The cause of the papilledema in this patient was not clear; it did not appear to be related to increased intracranial pressure. Patients with syphilitic meningitis should receive prompt penicillin therapy to
P P McKellar+4 more
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Papilledema with Hamartoma of Hypothalamus
Archives of Ophthalmology, 1961A patient with unusual bilateral papilledema and exudative retinopathy was found to have a histologically-proven hamartoma which apparently arose from the region of the hypothalamus. He was an adult in otherwise good general health. There was no history of precocious puberty or abnormal body growth during adolescence, which is unusual in patients ...
George J. Hayes+2 more
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1935
Papilledema, defined as edema of the optic disk, produced by increased intracranial pressure, is one of the most important symptoms of intracranial as well as of ocular pathologic change. The great importance of this symptom was recognized by the great Albrecht von Graefe.
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Papilledema, defined as edema of the optic disk, produced by increased intracranial pressure, is one of the most important symptoms of intracranial as well as of ocular pathologic change. The great importance of this symptom was recognized by the great Albrecht von Graefe.
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Dural Arteriovenous Malformations and Papilledema
Neurosurgery, 1988Abstract We examined and managed two patients with posterior fossa dural arteriovenous malformations (DAVMs) and papilledema. Both DAVMs had venous drainage into the transverse, straight, and sigmoid dural venous sinuses. The mechanism of papilledema in the first case was presumed venous hypertension
In Sup Choi+4 more
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Archives of Neurology And Psychiatry, 1925
In general, there are three principal theories advanced to account for the causation of choked disk: the inflammatory, the toxic or chemical and the mechanical. In addition to these theories, it has been suggested that various combinations of the factors involved in them may be regarded as the possible cause of the swelling of the disk in cases of ...
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In general, there are three principal theories advanced to account for the causation of choked disk: the inflammatory, the toxic or chemical and the mechanical. In addition to these theories, it has been suggested that various combinations of the factors involved in them may be regarded as the possible cause of the swelling of the disk in cases of ...
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Papilledema in the Assessment of Ventriculomegaly
Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology, 2006To determine whether ventriculomegaly is associated with ongoing increased intracranial pressure (ICP), physicians often rely on corroborative imaging features such as altered periependymal signal, distortion of ventricular shape, subarachnoid space flattening, and an increase in ventricular size over time.
Jonathan D. Trobe+3 more
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Papilledema: The Vexing Issues
Journal of Neuro-Ophthalmology, 2011Papilledema has long been recognized as a valuable sign of increased intracranial pressure (ICP). But because papilledema is based on interruption of the energy-dependent process of axoplasmic flow, it appears late after a rise in ICP. Papilledema is usually present in chronically high ICP but sometimes asymmetrically in the 2 eyes and rarely in 1 eye ...
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Headaches Associated with Papilledema
Current Pain and Headache Reports, 2012Headaches associated with papilledema may be both life-threatening as well as vision-threatening. This review will review the following clinical features: (1) the character of headaches associated with increased intracranial pressure; (2) the visual symptoms associated with papilledema; (3) the funduscopic findings of true papilledema versus pseudo ...
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