Home (Hemianopia)
Home  
 
 
Home » Disease » Hemianopia


 

Hemianopia

Disease HemianaesthesiaHemianopsia

absolute hemianopia
Type: Term
Definitions:
1. hemianopia in which the affected field is totally insensitive to all visual stimuli.

 


hemianopia
hemi npi noun a state of partial blindness in which someone has only half the usual field of vision in ...
hemiarthroplasty ...

Hemianopia
A loss of one-half of the field of vision; for example, all of the right side of vision is gone. This is sometimes seen in older people with vascular problems, in certain types of brain tumors or after head trauma.

Hemianopia Blindness affecting half of the field of vision. Hemianopia, also known as hemianopsia, may be caused by various medical conditions, but usually results from a stroke or brain injury.

Hemianopia
Hemianopia is a loss of one half of the normal visual field.
Hemicranias ...

(Hemianopia; Hemiopia; Bitemporal Hemianopsia; Homonymous Hemianopsia; Left Homonymous Hemianopsia; Right Homonymous Hemianopsia; Superior Hemianopsia; Inferior Hemianopsia)
Pronounced: hem-ee-uh-NOPE-see-uh
by Sarah J. Kerr, BA ...

Hemianopia (loss of half of the visual field)
Cognitive function - effect on thinking, awareness of surroundings, attention, learning, judgement and memory)
Hemianaesthesia (loss of sensation of the affected part) ...

1 Partial hemianopia
2 Complete hemianopia
3 Bilateral hemianopia (blind including cortical blindness) ...

Studies on Hemianopia, which causes vision loss on either right or left, or both, and have revolutionized the way this disease is understood. The Pituitary Ring Sign with apoplexy studies are breaking new ground on how we treat this condition.

Bitemporal hemianopia
Loss of all or part of the lateral half of both visual fields; does not cross the vertical median
More common: Chiasmal lesion (eg, pituitary adenoma, meningioma, craniopharyngioma, aneurysm, glioma) ...

(82 causes), Wide-set eyes (422 causes), Wandering eye (3 causes), Aniscoria (10 causes), Enophthalmos (24 causes), Enophthalmus (8 causes), Enopthalmos (7 causes), Entropion (12 causes), Exophthalmos (43 causes), Exopthalmos (10 causes), Hemianopia ...

Visual field defects - such as homonymous hemianopia, when one half of the visual field in each eye is missing.
Double vision (diplopia) this is where a single object is seen as two and cannot be merged together.

ATG, LCI, EMAC, USP-NF, Dobrava-Belgrade Virus, Flare, Solar, gamma Aminobutyric Acid Receptor, Gingival Pockets, Glands, Cardiac, Groenouws Dystrophies, Hemianopias, Binasal, Human parechovirus 1, Injection, Intracytoplasmic Sperm, Islet Cell Tumor, ...

CP, CT, cytomegalovirus, dental caries, diplegia, Down syndrome, dysarthria, dyskinetic, EEG, electroencephalogram, electromyography, EMG, encephalitis, epilepsy, fetal distress syndrome, fetus, German measles, Gilbert's syndrome, hemianopia, ...

The anatomy of this structure causes pressure on it to produce a defect in the temporal visual field on both sides, a condition called bitemporal hemianopia.

Hemianopia
Hemianopsia
Hemianopsia (bitemporal hemianopsia)
Hemianopsia (homonymous hemianopsia)
Hemianopsia (inferior hemianopsia)
Hemianopsia (left homonymous hemianopsia)
Hemianopsia (right homonymous hemianopsia) ...

Compression of the optic chiasm leading to loss of vision in the outer visual fields (typically bitemporal hemianopia) ...

See also: Stroke, Injury, Symptom, Visual field, Injuries

Disease HemianaesthesiaHemianopsia

 
 rssRSS