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Hemianopsia, or hemianopia, is a visual field loss on the left or right side of the vertical midline. It can affect one eye but usually affects both eyes. Homonymous hemianopsia (or homonymous hemianopia) is hemianopic visual field loss on the same side of both eyes. Homonymous hemianopsia occurs because the right half of the brain has visual ...
The visual pathway consists of structures that carry visual information from the retina to the brain.Lesions in that pathway cause a variety of visual field defects. In the visual system of human eye, the visual information processed by retinal photoreceptor cells travel in the following way:
No light perception is considered total visual impairment, or total blindness; see Visual impairment#Classification: NPC: Near point of convergence or no previous correction NRC Normal retinal correspondence NV Near vision NWT Normal wearing time o symptoms Zero symptoms ϕ Horizontal orthophoria θ Vertical orthophoria ⊕
comet shaped visual field defect, extending temporally from the physiological blind spot Blumberg's sign: Jacob Moritz Blumberg: surgery: peritonitis: rebound tenderness Boas' point: Ismar Isidor Boas: gastroenterology: gastric ulcer: dermal hyperaesthesia just left of T12 Boas' sign: Ismar Isidor Boas: gastroenterology: acute cholecystitis
Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), also called retrolental fibroplasia (RLF) and Terry syndrome, is a disease of the eye affecting prematurely born babies generally having received neonatal intensive care, in which oxygen therapy is used because of the premature development of their lungs. [2]
However, in the event that both of these routes of investigation yield normal findings or an inadequate explanation, non-invasive duplex ultrasound studies are recommended to identify carotid artery disease. Most episodes of amaurosis fugax are the result of stenosis of the ipsilateral carotid artery. [41]
The visual field is "that portion of space in which objects are visible at the same moment during steady fixation of the gaze in one direction"; [1] in ophthalmology and neurology the emphasis is mostly on the structure inside the visual field and it is then considered “the field of functional capacity obtained and recorded by means of perimetry”.
Occipital lobe signs usually involve visual sensation, and may include: [citation needed] total loss of vision (cortical blindness) loss of vision with denial of the loss (Anton's syndrome) loss of vision on one side of the visual field of both eyes (homonymous hemianopsia) visual agnosias, i.e. inability to recognize familiar objects, colors ...