Results 121 to 130 of about 11,276 (166)
Differential Impact of Retinal Lesions on Visual Responses of LGN X and Y Cells. [PDF]
Yang J, Huxlin K, Briggs F.
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Visual Field Examinations for Retinal Diseases: A Narrative Review. [PDF]
Kim KE, Ahn SJ.
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Autoimmune retinopathy in patients with myasthenia gravis: cases series and literature review. [PDF]
Chen Y +9 more
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Robust and Reproducible Population Receptive Field Mapping in Patients with Retinal Pathologies
Ritter M +8 more
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Survey of Ophthalmology, 2019
A 54-year-old white man presented with a "blind spot" temporally in his left eye. Best-corrected visual acuity in the affected eye was 20/20, and Humphrey visual field revealed an enlarged blind spot. Funduscopic examination revealed subtle peripapillary pigmentary changes corresponding to a well-demarcated peripapillary region of hyperautofluorescence
Amir H, Marvasti +3 more
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A 54-year-old white man presented with a "blind spot" temporally in his left eye. Best-corrected visual acuity in the affected eye was 20/20, and Humphrey visual field revealed an enlarged blind spot. Funduscopic examination revealed subtle peripapillary pigmentary changes corresponding to a well-demarcated peripapillary region of hyperautofluorescence
Amir H, Marvasti +3 more
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American Journal of Psychiatry, 1973
A number of writers have advanced the opinion that it is beneficial to a patient to have a therapist of the same ethnic background. The authors point out that this may lead to "blind spots" that prevent the therapist from seeing the irrationality of certain of the patient's attitudes. They give three case examples that illustrate this point.
E T, Shapiro, H, Pinsker
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A number of writers have advanced the opinion that it is beneficial to a patient to have a therapist of the same ethnic background. The authors point out that this may lead to "blind spots" that prevent the therapist from seeing the irrationality of certain of the patient's attitudes. They give three case examples that illustrate this point.
E T, Shapiro, H, Pinsker
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Archives of Ophthalmology, 1950
IN A REVIEW of the visual field records of some 3,000 cases accumulated at the Charlotte Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital since 1928, it was observed that these included a surprising number of cases of pericentral ring scotomas.1Larger ring scotomas, of the sort familiar in retinitis pigmentosa and of the nerve fiber bundle type, appeared less frequently ...
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IN A REVIEW of the visual field records of some 3,000 cases accumulated at the Charlotte Eye, Ear and Throat Hospital since 1928, it was observed that these included a surprising number of cases of pericentral ring scotomas.1Larger ring scotomas, of the sort familiar in retinitis pigmentosa and of the nerve fiber bundle type, appeared less frequently ...
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Survey of Ophthalmology, 2002
A 28-year-old woman presented with painful unilateral left visual loss, impaired color vision, left afferent pupillary defect, and normal ocular fundus. Although optic neuritis was first suspected, visual fields disclosed a junctional scotoma related to chiasmal demyelination, due to a probable multiple sclerosis.
Dan, Milea, Phuc, LeHoang
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A 28-year-old woman presented with painful unilateral left visual loss, impaired color vision, left afferent pupillary defect, and normal ocular fundus. Although optic neuritis was first suspected, visual fields disclosed a junctional scotoma related to chiasmal demyelination, due to a probable multiple sclerosis.
Dan, Milea, Phuc, LeHoang
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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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