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Acute Demyelinating Optic Neuritis. Acute demyelinating optic neuritis ... and an afferent pupillary defect. Focus Point #2. Traditional measures of visual function, such as Snellen charts, ...
Lack of an afferent pupillary defect Various maculopathies, bilateral optic neuropathy (including bilateral DON), Susac syndrome, media opacities (e.g., posterior subcapsular cataract, corneal ...
Demyelinating optic neuritis is often a herald of multiple sclerosis, but it is only one of the many neuro-ophthalmologic abnormalities which may present in MS. X. No Results. ... Lack of an afferent ...
The right pupil was round and briskly reactive with no afferent pupillary defect, ... The optic nerve had trace pallor with sharp margins and a cup-to-disc ratio of 0.2.
Results These studies identified apical location and strong adherence to apical structures, including the optic nerve, as characteristics carrying a higher risk of postoperative vision loss. Symptoms ...
Clinical characteristics of optic neuritis phenotypes in a 3-year follow-up ... Unilateral ONH usually presents as strabismus with a relative afferent pupil defect and unsteady fixation in the ...
No relative afferent pupillary defect was detected. Snellen visual acuity measurements were 6/60 in the right eye and 6/9 in the left eye. The Humphrey perimetry visual field test (10-2 threshold) ...
OBJECTIVES Recovery to normal or near normal visual acuity is usual after acute demyelinating optic neuritis, despite the frequent persistence of conduction abnormalities as evidenced by the visual ...
Background/Aims Optic neuritis (ON) is the primary ophthalmic manifestation of myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein-IgG-associated disorder (MOGAD), but numerous reports have expanded the visual ...