
The Neuro-ophthalmology Survival Guide
- 1st Edition - March 13, 2007
- Imprint: Mosby Ltd.
- Authors: Anthony Pane, Michael Burdon, Neil R. Miller
- Language: English
A practical, symptom-orientated handbook of neuro-ophthalmology for all trainee and practising… Read more
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A practical, symptom-orientated handbook of neuro-ophthalmology for all trainee and practising ophthalmologists.
- Practical and accessible handbook for the ophthalmologist without a specialist interest in neuro-ophthalmology and acquired strabismus.
- Simplifies a subject which is often a cause of litigation against pracising ophthalmologists and exam failure for trainees and residents.
- Aids diagnosis in a field in which mistakes may lead to medico-legal problems, eg brain tumours presenting with blurred or double vision.
- Symptom-orientated - guides the reader from the presenting symptom to diagnosis and treatment or referral, through a series of easy to follow flowcharts.
- Chapter One presents 20 "golden rules" to keep you and your patients out of trouble
Ophthalmology Residents, Ophthalmologists, Neuro-Ophthalmologists
Staying out of trouble. Blurred vision or field loss. Swollen disc(s), normal vision. Transient visual loss. Double vision. "Seeing things". Abnormal movement of the visual world. Abnormal eye movements without visual symptoms. Unequal pupils. Ptosis. Facial weakness or spasm. Unexplained eye pain, orbital pain or headache. Neuro-ophthalmic history and examination
- Edition: 1
- Published: March 13, 2007
- Imprint: Mosby Ltd.
- Language: English
AP
Anthony Pane
Affiliations and expertise
Neuro-Ophthalmologist, Queensland Eye Institute, Brisbane, AustraliaMB
Michael Burdon
Affiliations and expertise
Consultant Neuro-Ophthalmologist, Selly Oak Hospital, Birmingham, UKNM
Neil R. Miller
Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Ophthalmology, Neurology and Neurosurgery, Frank B Walsh Professor of Neuro-ophthalmology, Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD, USA