A 66-year-old patient first noticed trouble with his right peripheral vision 2 weeks prior to presentation while he was playing golf. He also complained of more trouble with light to dark adaptation ...
We report a case of comorbidity of exotropia with homonymous hemianopia in whom a careful preoperative assessment helped avoid an unexpected surgical outcome. A 50-year-old male presented with a ...
We report a 23-year-old woman with right homonymous hemianopia and incomplete left inferior quadrantanopia and paracentral scotoma secondary to head trauma from a gunshot wound. The patient underwent ...
Suddenly you can’t see to one side. It’s not that your left eye (or right) has stopped working entirely. It’s that you lose half of the visual field in both eyes. It’s like wearing glasses with a half ...
The correct diagnosis is homonymous hemianopia. Infants with a homonymous hemianopia can present with an anomalous head position where they turn their face ipsilateral to the visual field defect. It ...
So if you had a stroke or injury to the left occipital lobe which is at the back of the brain, then there's a good chance that you'll have what's called a right-sided homonymous hemianopia, and that ...
Strokes are serious and life threatening medical emergencies that require immediate attention. They occur when blood supply to a section of the brain is temporarily cut off. This could be due to a ...
A landmarking brain stimulation technique offers faster and accurate rewiring of brain communication networks, enhancing vision recovery in stroke affected people suffering from hemianopia. Over ...
A 77-year-old man awoke with blurred vision in each eye. His vision had been normal the night before. He had no headaches, jaw claudication, or other symptoms of giant cell arteritis. He denied any ...
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