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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a newly identified syndrome in which nasal retinal fibres fail to decussate due to the inborn absence of an optic chiasm. Visual evoked potential (VEP) assessment and neuro-opththalmic evaluation in two unrelated, non-albino children revealed the unusual visual pathway anomaly in the form of misrouted retinal-fugal projections. Monocular VEP responses across the occiput, regardless of stimulus mode (full- or partial-field pattern onset, pattern reversal, luminance flash or high temporal frequency luminance flicker) showed unequivocal evidence of pathological VEP ipsilateral asymmetry. Marked attenuation of primary visual evoked responses from the occiput contralateral to the eye of stimulation, indicative of aberrant contralateral retinal-fugal projections, was confirmed by MRI which depicted the remarkable achiasmatic condition. MRIs and neurological evaluation also confirmed the absence of accompanying congenital or acquired brain malformations or anomalies. Ophthalmic evaluation revealed that both achiasmatic children had reduced distance acuity for age, alternating
esotropia
, torticollis, head
tremor
and ocular motor instability; visual fields were normal. Eye movements were also monitored and indicated congenital nystagmus waveforms in the horizontal plane; see-saw nystagmus was observed in the the horizontal plane; see-saw nystagmus was observed in the vertical and torsional planes. The age range of the two children during evaluation and follow-up, over a 6-year period, was about 4-15 years. Comparisons of VEP responses from age-matched normal, albino and idiopathic congenital nystagmus controls, recorded under the same VEP test conditions, were also performed. In contrast to the achiasmatic ipsilateral inter-ocular asymmetry, the albinos showed the expected monocular VEP topography pattern of contralateral asymmetry. Also as expected, VEP profiles from the normal controls and those with congenital nystagmus, evinced no aberrant asymmetry patterns. In general, the results indicate that the VEP misrouting protocol is indispensable for the non-invasive electrophysiological detection and differential diagnosis of optic pathway mutations and may well identify individuals with purported idiopathic congenital nystagmus or albinism that are, in fact, achiasmatic.
...
PMID:Non-decussating retinal-fugal fibre syndrome. An inborn achiasmatic malformation associated with visuotopic misrouting, visual evoked potential ipsilateral asymmetry and nystagmus. 749 80
Head
shaking
is a rare phenomenon that refers to repetitive, low-amplitude rhythmic oscillations of the head around the cervical axis. In otherwise neurologically normal children with concomitant ophthalmic disease, head
shaking
(and/or nodding, ie, vertical oscillations) can be an associated finding or a compensatory mechanism to improve visual acuity.(1) Head
shaking
as a compensatory mechanism to maintain ocular alignment in intermittent
esotropia
is the subject of this case report.
...
PMID:Control of intermittent esotropia by head shaking. 1741 32