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Query: UMLS:C0038379 (strabismus)
9,317 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Vergence movements induced by base-out prisms were recorded, with an infrared eye tracker, for 6 patients with comitant esotropia (i.e., convergent strabismus) and anomalous retinal correspondence and for 6 normal subjects. Vergence movements of strabismic subjects were much slower and showed characteristics different from those of controls. It may be argued that vergence movements are induced by disparity and represent the motor fusion component left over in strabismus. In fact, in this study accommodative as well as proximal vergence had been ruled out. Therefore, the movements recorded can be considered the objective representation of the well-known phenomenon of prism compensation or adaptation, found in many strabismic patients.
Percept Mot Skills 1990 Dec
PMID:Vergence movements in comitant strabismus. 208 79

The purpose of the study was to measure the influence of subjects' alertness on heterophoria. An experimental group of 43 patients was measured with the Maddox Wing test for heterophoria. Exophoria was greater 1 1/2, 2 1/2, and 3 1/2 hr. after the end of general anesthesia than at baseline level. Data for a control group of 25 did not vary on the Maddox Wing over four hours. The baseline level was not different between the two groups, so heterophoria as measured with the Maddox Wing can be used to evaluate subjects' alertness during recovery from general anesthesia.
Percept Mot Skills 1989 Dec
PMID:Heterophoria as a measure of subjects' alertness during recovery from general anesthesia. 260 17

Natural ocular protective measures induced by laser glare at 514 nm were evaluated concomitant with the performance of a tracking task. Light-induced eyelid and pupil responses of 5 volunteers, 1 woman and 4 men, ages 23 to 60 years, were recorded as they tracked a target moving at 0.3 degrees/sec. with an optical sight. Frame-by-frame analysis of video images of the eye allowed assessment of the eyelid response (squint and blink) and measurement of the pupil diameter. Three laser exposure durations (0.1, 1.0, and 3.0 sec.) were used during bright and dim ambient light conditions. All laser exposure trials produced a pupillary constriction with a latency, i.e., the time from the onset of the laser exposure until the pupil began to constrict, of approximately 100 msec. In a representative 3-sec. exposure, the total intraocular energy was reduced by 69% as the pupil diameter decreased from 6.0 to 2.5 mm. For the 0.1-sec. exposures at 1.6 mW/cm2, a blink reflex was observed on 2 of 10 trials under the dim ambient conditions and not observed on 9 trials under bright conditions. For 1- and 3-sec. exposures at 0.33 mW/cm2, a blink reflex was observed on four (3 bright and 1 dim) of the 38 trials. For conditions evaluated, pupillary constriction was consistent and provided some protection when the exposure duration exceeded the pupillary latency period; however, a blink reflex was observed on only a limited number of trials, possibly due to the exposure dose, the small retinal irradiance diameter produced by the laser exposure, and the volunteers' attention to the demanding performance task.
Percept Mot Skills 2002 Dec
PMID:Human pupil and eyelid response to intense laser light: implications for protection. 1250 75

Two experiments were conducted to determine the role of head constraint, whether present or absent and arm exposure type (terminal or continuous) on the production of intermanual transfer to two types of visual distortion. Experiment 1 investigated intermanual transfer to binocular, lateral prism displacement where the prism base orientation for both eyes was in the same direction. Experiment 2 determined whether intermanual transfer could be produced to squint prism viewing where the prism base orientation for each eye was in an opposite direction (base-out prisms). In both experiments transfer was produced when either head movement during prism exposure was unconstrained or when a terminal arm exposure was employed. Maximal transfer was produced when both of these conditions were employed.
J Mot Behav 1978 Jun
PMID:Visuomotor coordination and intermanual transfer for a proprioceptive reaching task. 1518 Sep 17