Discover the latest advancements in Homonymous Hemianopia treatment with Ocutech's SideSight, to enhance mobility and safety for individuals with vision loss. Homonymous Hemianopia (HH) is the loss of ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
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 ...
Read before the Boston Society for Medical Improvement, May 12, 1884.
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.