Nystagmus is a form of ocular oscillation in which the primary disturbance is an unwanted slow-phase drift of the eyes away from the target of interest. It contrasts with the type of disturbance of fixation in which the primary offending movement is an unwanted saccade (intrusion) away from the target of interest. Here we combine a mechanistic and observational approach to develop a flow chart for the classification of nystagmus for diagnosis and treatment.MTnystagmusanddisordersofocularstability; Medical Knowledge; Practice Based Learning and Improvemen
The essential difference between nystagmus and saccadic intrusions lies in the initial eye movement ...
This chapter concerns abnormal eye movements that disrupt steady fixation and thereby degrade vision...
Nystagmus is an involuntary oscillation of the eyes with a slow eye movement in one direction and a ...
Nystagmus is a form of ocular oscillation in which the primary disturbance is an unwanted slow-phase...
Nystagmus is a biphasic (to and fro) ocular oscillation in which the two phases have approximately e...
Nystagmus is defined as rhythmic, most often involuntary eye movements. It normally consists of a sl...
Nystagmus can be classified into pendular and jerk waveforms, where both are generated by a slow, pa...
Nystagmus may be defined as a to-and-fro ocular oscillation, of one or both yes, in which each phase...
Our classification of nystagmus starts by relating the various forms of nystagmus to disorders of vi...
The ocular motor system consists of several subsystems, including the vestibular ocular nystagmus sa...
Nystagmus, the rhythmic to and fro oscillation of the eye, has often been regarded as enigmatic. In ...
Nystagmus is often encountered in neuro-ophthalmic practice, having a prevalence of about 24 per 10,...
Congenital nystagmus is an ocular–motor disorder that develops in the first few months of life; its ...
It is often possible to diagnose the cause of nystagmus through careful history and systematic exami...
Demonstration of physiological nystagmus, where oscillations do not represent pathology, but occur w...
The essential difference between nystagmus and saccadic intrusions lies in the initial eye movement ...
This chapter concerns abnormal eye movements that disrupt steady fixation and thereby degrade vision...
Nystagmus is an involuntary oscillation of the eyes with a slow eye movement in one direction and a ...
Nystagmus is a form of ocular oscillation in which the primary disturbance is an unwanted slow-phase...
Nystagmus is a biphasic (to and fro) ocular oscillation in which the two phases have approximately e...
Nystagmus is defined as rhythmic, most often involuntary eye movements. It normally consists of a sl...
Nystagmus can be classified into pendular and jerk waveforms, where both are generated by a slow, pa...
Nystagmus may be defined as a to-and-fro ocular oscillation, of one or both yes, in which each phase...
Our classification of nystagmus starts by relating the various forms of nystagmus to disorders of vi...
The ocular motor system consists of several subsystems, including the vestibular ocular nystagmus sa...
Nystagmus, the rhythmic to and fro oscillation of the eye, has often been regarded as enigmatic. In ...
Nystagmus is often encountered in neuro-ophthalmic practice, having a prevalence of about 24 per 10,...
Congenital nystagmus is an ocular–motor disorder that develops in the first few months of life; its ...
It is often possible to diagnose the cause of nystagmus through careful history and systematic exami...
Demonstration of physiological nystagmus, where oscillations do not represent pathology, but occur w...
The essential difference between nystagmus and saccadic intrusions lies in the initial eye movement ...
This chapter concerns abnormal eye movements that disrupt steady fixation and thereby degrade vision...
Nystagmus is an involuntary oscillation of the eyes with a slow eye movement in one direction and a ...