Hemianopia is when you lose sight in half of your visual field. This condition is not a problem with your eyes. It occurs after a stroke or other brain injury. The type of hemianopia you have depends ...
Hemianopia is the loss of half of a person’s field of vision. This can occur due to a variety of factors, but it most commonly results from a stroke. Hemianopia means a person loses half of their ...
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 search for the lesion(s) was targeted to the visual pathways posterior to the LGN, because there was bilateral visual loss with normal pupillary light reflexes. This finding places the causative ...
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 ...
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 ...
Hemianopia is a loss of half a person’s peripheral vision. This means a person loses the right half or left half of vision in each eye. Hemianopia can occur from injury to the brain, such as a stroke.
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