phenylephrine-hydrochloride and Esotropia

phenylephrine-hydrochloride has been researched along with Esotropia* in 4 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for phenylephrine-hydrochloride and Esotropia

ArticleYear
[Electrophysiological and psychophysical studies of asymmetrical sensitivity of the nasal and temporal hemiretina in an esotropic amblyopia].
    Nippon Ganka Gakkai zasshi, 1983, Mar-10, Volume: 87, Issue:3

    Topics: Adult; Electroencephalography; Electroretinography; Esotropia; Evoked Potentials, Visual; Humans; Nose; Psychophysics; Retina; Strabismus; Temporal Lobe; Visual Cortex

1983

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for phenylephrine-hydrochloride and Esotropia

ArticleYear
Motion detection in normal infants and young patients with infantile esotropia.
    Vision research, 2005, Volume: 45, Issue:12

    The purpose of this study was to investigate asymmetries in detection of horizontal motion in normal infants and children and in patients with infantile esotropia. Motion detection thresholds (% motion signal) were measured in 75 normal infants and in 36 eyes of 27 infants with infantile esotropia (ET), using a forced-choice preferential looking paradigm with random-dot patterns. Absolute motion detection sensitivity and asymmetries in sensitivity for nasalward (N) vs. temporalward (T) directions of motion were compared in normal and patient populations, ranging in age from 1 month to 5 years. In normal infants, N and T thresholds were equivalent under 2.5 months of age, whereas a superiority for monocular detection of N motion was observed between 3.5 and 6.5 months of age. The nasalward advantage gradually diminished to symmetrical T:N performance by 8 months of age, matching that of adults. No asymmetry was observed in 15 normal infants who performed the task binocularly, hence, the asymmetry was not a leftward/rightward bias. In the youngest infantile ET patients tested, at 5 months of age, a nasalward superiority in motion detection was observed and was equivalent to that of same-age normal infants. However, unlike normals, this asymmetry persists in older patients. This greater asymmetry in infantile ET represents worse detection of T than N motion. This is the first report of an asymmetry in motion detection in normal infants across a wide age range. Initially, motion detection is normal in infants with infantile esotropia. Cumulative abnormal binocular experience in these patients may disrupt motion mechanisms.

    Topics: Aging; Child Development; Child, Preschool; Esotropia; Head; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Motion Perception; Nose; Photic Stimulation; Psychophysics; Reaction Time; Sensory Thresholds; Vision, Binocular; Vision, Monocular

2005
A clinical study of the craniofacial features in Apert syndrome.
    International journal of oral and maxillofacial surgery, 1996, Volume: 25, Issue:1

    A clinical study of the craniofacial features in Apert syndrome is based on our experience with 136 cases. Characteristics included hyperacrobrachycephaly, steep wide forehead, flat occiput, common craniofacial asymmetry, ocular hypertelorism and proptosis, downslanting palpebral fissures, divergent upgaze and esotropic downgaze, a tendency towards large ears, and marked depression of the nasal bridge. The nose is short and wide with a bulbous tip, and the anterior facial height is reduced. Common features during infancy included horizontal grooves above the supraorbital ridges that disappear with age, a break in the continuity of the eyebrows, and a trapezoidal-shaped mouth at rest. Radiographic aspects of Apert syndrome were also assessed. Tables are provided which compare the craniofacial features of Apert and Crouzon syndromes.

    Topics: Acrocephalosyndactylia; Craniofacial Dysostosis; Ear, External; Esotropia; Exophthalmos; Eyelid Diseases; Face; Facial Asymmetry; Facial Bones; Forehead; Humans; Hypertelorism; Infant; Mouth Abnormalities; Nasal Bone; Nose; Occipital Bone; Orbit; Radiography; Skull; Strabismus

1996
Orbital hypertelorism.
    Scandinavian journal of plastic and reconstructive surgery, 1981, Volume: 15, Issue:3

    Topics: Adult; Bone Transplantation; Child; Child, Preschool; Craniofacial Dysostosis; Esotropia; Humans; Hypertelorism; Male; Nose; Orbit; Osteotomy; Smell; Taste

1981