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Name the Lesion Impress the crowd! Win respect! Get lucky! CASE 1 A 22-year-old man had headache and progressively blurred vision over 3 weeks. The patient had had relevant symptoms for 2 years. No evidence of diabetes insipidus was found. Examination showed impaired visual acuity in the both eyes. Perimetric evaluation revealed bilateral inferior temporal field defects. Fundoscopy revealed atrophy of both optic discs. The patient showed no adenopathy. Case 1 Chiasmal Disorders Case 2 R.M. was a 64-year-old right-handed woman with negative family, psychiatric, and medical history, except for two remote events of thoracic herpes zoster and pericarditis. Her neurological disturbances began at age 55 with slight difficulties in object recognition and subsequent difficulties in using them. Owing to this, she later began to confound clothes, lost her household competence and autonomy in doing shopping; furthermore, she had to give up working, required supervision in household tasks and had to be accompanied out of her home. Five years after disease onset, R.M. showed impairment in recognizing familiar places, reading, writing, and recognizing fingers and faces. She was aware of her disability, and the neurological examination was otherwise normal. She had full visual field, normal eye movements, and good acuity. Neuropsychological Examination 1 Spared skills Verbal IQ Card sorting Verbal memory Immed visuospatial memory Verbal fluency semantic phonemic Token Test Praxis Tactile recognition Auditory recognition Writing Impaired Skills Performance IQ Design copying Finger naming Delayed visuospatial memory Picture naming Word reading Neuropsychological Examination 2 Spared skills Verbal IQ Card sorting Verbal memory Verbal fluency semantic phonemic Token Test Praxis Tactile recognition Auditory recognition Writing Impaired Skills Performance IQ Design copying Finger naming Delayed visuospatial memory Picture naming Word reading Immed visuospatial memory Verbal fluency semantic Writing Case 3 A 74-year-old male with a history of Type 2 diabetes, ischaemic heart disease, coronary artery bypass grafting, carotid endarterectomy (left), bronchial asthma and left hemiparesis from a previous cerebrovascular accident presented with a loss of vision on the right side happening one morning together with a sensation of flushing and mild giddiness. He was admitted and assessed. He was found on initial assessment to have right homonymous hemianopia and no other neurologic deficit apart from the pre-existing weakness of the left upper and lower limbs. Over the next few hours after this happened he noticed vivid images of lions and cats in the right visual field. Over the next few days he described as seeing flock of birds, pack of hounds, chessboards and brightly coloured scarves in the same area. The themes were repetitive and lasted several minutes. The patient reports that these visual sensations tend to happen more when he is animated (talking, laughing, etc. in the presence of company). He was sometimes annoyed by them but was fully aware that these were not real. He was found to have a Snellen visual acuity of 6/12 (20/40) right eye and 6/9 (20/30) left eye and the ocular examination was otherwise normal. There was no evidence of diabetic retinopathy. Goldman kinetic perimetry confirmed right homonymous hemianopia with macular sparing (Fig. 1). Goldmann Perimetry – Case 3 MRI- Case 3 An unenhanced CT scan of his head showed evidence of a recent left occipital lobe ischemic infarction (in the vascular territory of the left internal occipital artery involving both grey and white matter) and an old right posterior circulation infarct affecting the occipital region sparing the primary visual cortex. Case 3 – Charles Bonnet Syndrome • Theories – “deafferentation”: lack of visual sensory input into the cortex causing spontaneous neuronal discharge leading to abnormal visual perceptions not unlike the phantom limb syndrome – “perceptual release”: normal sensory input inhibits irrelevant impulses from the conscious perception of images. Where there is a reduction in sensory input, the threshold to suppress irrelevant images cannot be achieved and previously subconscious perceptions are ‘released’ into consciousness, resulting in a visual hallucination Case 4 A 4-year-old Hispanic girl came to a neighborhood community health center for her first eye examination. She was referred by her pediatrician for vague neurologic symptoms. Her mother stated that sometimes the child’s eyes crossed, but they quickly returned to normal. No other problems were noted; the mother believed her daughter saw well and had no complaints about her eyes. The patient denied having any flashes of light or floaters and had no previous eye trauma. She was taking no medications and had no known allergies. Her mother was not aware of any systemic health problems or any family history of ocular or systemic problems. The patient’s entering uncorrected visual acuities were 20/32 in the right eye (O.D.) and 20/25 in the left eye (O.S.). Retinoscopy findings showed a mild refractive error with vision correctable to 20/20 O.D. and O.S. Cover test results showed orthophoriaat 6 meters and 3 prism diopters of exophoria at 40 cm. Pupils were equal, round, and reactive to light without evidence of relative afferent pupillary defect. Extraocular muscle testing results were significant for an asymmetric, horizontal, gazeevoked nystagmus, with the left gaze worse than the right gaze. Visual fields by confrontation were full in both eyes (OU) in all 4 quadrants O.D. and O.S. The remainder of the exam revealed no evidence of optic nerve or retinal pathology. After further questioning, the patient’s mother stated that on one occasion 3 weeks earlier, the child started crying for no apparent reason. During that time, the right side of her mouth drooped and her right eyelid closed. The mother then took the child to her pediatrician, who ordered an electroencephalogram, the results of which were negative. Case 4: Large Brainstem Astrocytoma Case 4: Gaze-Evoked Nystagmus • GEN: rhythmic oscillation of eyes when attempting to hold an extreme position of fixation • Three pathways to a saccade: – Upper: voluntary initiation; caudate and SN – Middle: controls saccade trajectory; SC – Lower: initiation; burst neurons (quick); Purkinje cells (pursuit)