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Snapshot hyperspectral retinal camera with the Image Mapping
Snapshot hyperspectral retinal camera with the Image Mapping

... in Fig. 2 (b) (see a scan of all acquired wavelengths in Media 1). Note that vertical stripes show up in Media 1. These stripes are image artifacts and are caused by the mirror facets’ reflectivity variations in the current IMS. In order to provide a baseline reference, a retinal camera image witho ...
Visual acuity and color vision deficiency in amblyopia
Visual acuity and color vision deficiency in amblyopia

... Accepted: February 10, 1999 ...
Visual function after bilateral implantation of apodized diffractive
Visual function after bilateral implantation of apodized diffractive

... near vision, distorted far vision, blurred near vision, blurred far vision, and double vision. A mean score indicating minimum difficulty was reported for halos, glare, and night vision (Table 2). Similarly, 15 of the 17 items on the lifestyle activities questionnaire had a mean score of less than 1 ...
march issue.cdr
march issue.cdr

... Initial care was at a general hospital where she was trauma or surgery or as a result of haematogenous hospitalized and had parenteral antibiotics, the names spread from bacteraemia. Prior to the antibiotic era, of the antibiotics were not known to the patient. The patients with orbital cellulitis h ...
p. D1eye - Viktor`s Notes for the Neurosurgery Resident
p. D1eye - Viktor`s Notes for the Neurosurgery Resident

... afferent part (retina ÷ optic tract) lesion - bright flashlight is swung from one eye to other just below visual axis while subject stares at distant object in dark room - constriction of pupils should be the same when either eye is illuminated. N.B. in afferent defects, both pupils are equal in siz ...
Iowa Vision 2013 Spring - Carver College of Medicine
Iowa Vision 2013 Spring - Carver College of Medicine

... “Simulation testing allows us to evaluate a person’s visual acuity, contrast sensitivity and visual fields to determine their role in allowing a person to identify highway signs, road hazards and low contrast objects. It also offers insight into ways that people adjust for changes in vision,” states ...
Sheep Eye Dissection
Sheep Eye Dissection

... the eyes themselves do not focus or work together until months after birth. Most people have one dominant eye. To find out which of your eyes is dominant, form a circle with your thumb and index finger. Hold that position and place your hand in front of you. With both eyes, look at an object through ...
Thyroid Eye Disease
Thyroid Eye Disease

...  They prevent and reduce inflammation, leading to decreased swelling of tissue in and around the eyes  They down-regulate the immune system, which limits TED (an autoimmune disease) o However, many patients do not respond completely (or at all) to steroid treatment, and some patients have their sy ...
03. Neurostomatological syndromes
03. Neurostomatological syndromes

... Cranial arteritis. Thickened superficial temporal artery ...
dislocation of globe into the anterior cranial fossa
dislocation of globe into the anterior cranial fossa

... in the literature. Time is a major modifiable factor in the management of traumatic globe dislocations. An eye dislocated out of the orbital socket is under serious vascular compromise and sustains severe mechanical damage. Often these patients have associated facial injuries or polytrauma.9 Salvagi ...
Module - Mount Sinai Hospital
Module - Mount Sinai Hospital

... Think of the eye in the shape of a ping-pong ball. The outside of the ball represents the outer globe of the eyeball or the outer protective layer. This outside layer is covered in sclera. The eyeball sits inside of the eye socket and a thick membrane lining called the conjunctiva covers the inner s ...
Management of the Red Eye
Management of the Red Eye

... Normal vision. No pain. Usually no obvious cause, often told by others that “eye is red.” May occur in cases of trauma, or in cases of coughing, vomiting, or straining. If traumatic must do thorough exam to R/O other pathology. ...
IOSR Journal of Electronics and Communication Engineering (IOSR-JECE)
IOSR Journal of Electronics and Communication Engineering (IOSR-JECE)

... hundred people aged 50 & younger and one over the age of 80. In India, people at age limit of 40 are affected by glaucoma and the estimate is around 11.2 million [2]. Glaucoma is a term describing a group of ocular disorder with multi-factorial etiology united by a clinically characteristic Intraocu ...
49-REFRACTIVE-SURGERIES-(2)
49-REFRACTIVE-SURGERIES-(2)

... haptic is first snaked through a 1.5mm incision. The silicone optic is then compressed & inserted. Once the optic unfolds in the anterior chamber the two tabs on either side of the optic are snapped into projections on the haptic. The main advantage of this lens is that the optic can be exchanged wi ...
Examination of the eye
Examination of the eye

... quiet and it should be able to be darkened. This can be achieved by fitting black-out blinds, or moving the patient to another room such as an x-ray room. Cats should be allowed a few minutes to acclimatise to the room. They should be gently restrained, using a towel only if necessary. Dogs are gene ...
TECNIS® toric 1-piece aspheric ioL
TECNIS® toric 1-piece aspheric ioL

... under the age of 2 years are not suitable candidates for intraocular lenses. The clinical study for the TECNIS® Toric 1-Piece IOL did not show evidence of effectiveness for the treatment of preoperative corneal astigmatism of less than one diopter. The TECNIS® Toric 1-Piece IOL should not be placed ...
Branch Retinal Vein Occlusion
Branch Retinal Vein Occlusion

... branch retinal vein occlusions (BRVOs) often are grouped and studied together. The natural history and complication rate for each entity differ. The treatments and their results vary from one condition to the other. This article deals exclusively with BRVO. Hemiretinal vein occlusions are probably v ...
A new prism use for treatment of cyclo
A new prism use for treatment of cyclo

... Of particular difficulty and frustration is the treatment of a rotational [torsional] deviation. Most commonly the rotational deviation is outward (excyclotorsion) and is caused from damage to the Trochlear Nerve (CNIV). The Trochlear Nerve innervates the superior oblique muscle whose action is to l ...
The Bedside and Office Neuro-ophthalmology Examination. James J
The Bedside and Office Neuro-ophthalmology Examination. James J

... Ishihara book is a 12 and is not pseudo-isochromatic. If the 12 cannot be seen the patient is either very seriously visually impaired or has functional visual loss. The color test is generally not done to see whether the patient is red–green impaired but to see whether color vision is worse in one e ...
The Msh-\\ke homeobox genes define domains in the
The Msh-\\ke homeobox genes define domains in the

... Fig. 2B). The conserved hexapeptide (Ile/Val-Tyr-ProTrp-Met-Arg) shared by many of the homeoboxcontaining genes, is retained only as the dipeptide ProTrp in the Hox-8.1 gene. Linkage analysis of the Hox-8.1 gene The majority of the homeobox-containing genes reside in one of four tightly linked multi ...
PDF
PDF

... the uveal tract lying just posterior to the corneal limbus. It is continuous anteriorly with the iris and posteriorly with the choroid. Iris, is the anterior part of the uveal tract. It forms a circular curtain with an opening in the center called pupil. Light enters the eyeball through the pupil.[1 ...
Antiphospholipid Syndrome
Antiphospholipid Syndrome

... been monitored on the regular basis. Renal biopsy was performed in October 1997 due to the proteinuria. The results showed thrombotic microangiopathy that was consistent with the diagnosis of antiphospholipid syndrome. The treatment with Aspirin was discontinued, and Coumadin was begun, 2.5 and 5 mg ...
Spectral Domain Optical Coherence Tomography
Spectral Domain Optical Coherence Tomography

... Time-domain OCT imaging has been commercially available for almost a decade and has become the cornerstone for retinal imaging. In the past 2 years, the FDA has approved several Fourier/spectral domain OCT (SDOCT) imaging devices. These machines acquire entire A-scans in one instance by measuring fr ...
EYE QUIZ 1. What is the primary (most powerful) focusing structure
EYE QUIZ 1. What is the primary (most powerful) focusing structure

... 22. Which cranial nerve innervates four of the six extraocular muscles (medial rectus, superior rectus, inferior rectus, and inferior oblique )? cranial nerve III 23. What is the point of sharpest, most distinct visual acuity within the eye? fovea centralis 24. The optic nerve is known also as what ...
Strabismus - Wsimg.com
Strabismus - Wsimg.com

... o Seen in infants in the first few months of life and out and dilated pupil (“blown wall eye”) o Unknown mechanism o Levator muscle weakness  ptosis (droopy eyelid) o Amblyopia is common o Treatment is surgery o CN3-innervated EOM weakness  eye o May require additional surgery or glasses pointed “ ...
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Mitochondrial optic neuropathies

Mitohondrial optic neuropathies are a heterogenous group of disorders that present with visual disturbances resultant from mitochondrial dysfunction within the anatomy of the Retinal Ganglion Cells (RGC), optic nerve, optic chiasm, and optic tract. These disturbances are multifactorial, their etiology consisting of metabolic and/or structural damage as a consequence of genetic mutations, environmental stressors, or both. The three most common neuro-ophthalmic abnormalities seen in mitochondrial disorders are bilateral optic neuropathy, ophthalmoplegia with ptosis, and pigmentary retinopathy.
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