10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «HEMIOPIA»
Discover the use of
hemiopia in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
hemiopia and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
New York Medical Abstract: Giving a General View of Current ...
However it may be, the results furnished relative to cerebral hemiopia in man will
serve to make us comprehend how, in our case, there is a coincidence between
lateral hemiopia and verbal blindness. The same interpretation might be applied
...
2
Ophthalmic Hospital Reports and Journal
Then he had hemiopia for a fortnight, at the end of which time he died. The
hemiopia affected the right half of each field, was complete, symmetrical, sharply
limited close to the yellow spot, the line of demarcation being vertical. A tumour
was ...
London (England) Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital, 1879
3
A Text-book of medicine
More significant is the limitation of vision to half the field in each eye, or hemiopia.
Assuming that the inner fibres of each optic tract cross at the chiasma and the
outer ones do not, three varieties of hemiopia may be described as follows : (1) ...
Charles Hilton Fagge, 1901
4
A Clinical Manual of Diseases of the Eye: Including a Sketch ...
HEMIOPIA. Hemiopia, hemianopsia, or hemianopia (r>i, half, tyts, sight). —
Hemiopia or half-sightedness, is a symptom pertaining to many varied diseases
and disorders of the optic nerves, either in their course or at their origin, and
while it is ...
Daniel Bennett St. John Roosa, 1894
5
The Principles and practice of medicine
Examples of all these forms of hemiopia are known o occur. Homologous lateral
hemiopia is very common in attacks of nigraine ; of double temporal hemiopia
two cases have been recorded (one iy Samisch, the other by E. Miiller), in each of
...
Charles Hilton Fagge, Philip Henry Pye-Smith, 1886
6
Lectures on the localization of spinal and cerbral diseases
These commissural fibres may, however, be left out of consideration in the study
of hemiopia. If now we bear in mind this distribution of fibres in the optic
apparatus we can by the aid of Fig. 6 demonstrate the mechanism of each of the
four ...
Edward Constant Seguin, 1878
7
London Medical Press and Circular
crotsing fibres, should paralyse the left half of the right retina, and the right half of
left retina, and thus produce what is called temporal hemiopia. M. Saemisch has
been able to make this diagnosis in a case during life, and to prove its ...
8
A System of Human Anatomy: Including Its Medical and ...
Hence pressure exerted against such fibres will cause paralysis of the nasal (
median) half of each eye, i.e., will cause nasal hemiopia. A growth at the base of
the brain to the median side of the optic tracts, z'.e., in the region of the pituitary ...
Harrison Allen, Edward Oram Shakespeare, 1884
9
Diseases and Injuries of the Eye: Their Medical and Surgical ...
There may be hemiopia or complete loss of half the field of vision, in many cases
distinctly marked as if by a vertical line, on one side of which all is clear, whilst on
the other all is dark. There are two forms of hemiopia to be noticed, the first ...
10
Manual of the Diseases of the Eye for Students and General ...
HEMIOPIA. 261 cause the left halves of the fields of vision are wanting.
Homonymous hemiopia (Fig. 138), therefore, always points to a lesion situated in
the visual path or cortex on the central side of the chiasm and upon the same
side as the ...
Charles Henry May, Charles Allen Perera, 1900