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1 apillofoveal horizontal step ("pistol barrel scotoma").
2 within the central 10 degrees ("Amsler grid scotoma").
3 ocessing, introducing central vision loss (a scotoma).
4 ubretinally in the area of atrophy (absolute scotoma).
5 egion of the contralateral visual hemifield (scotoma).
6 m adjust to a loss of foveal vision (central scotoma)?
7 xation, with marked reduction of the central scotoma.
8 ween angle alpha and the presence of central scotoma.
9 l targets presented in a foveal, TMS-induced scotoma.
10 ubjects with and without a simulated central scotoma.
11 ta were used to draw a map of the developing scotoma.
12 imulus was larger, but still confined to the scotoma.
13 localize bright targets within the resultant scotoma.
14 responses to visual stimuli presented in the scotoma.
15 because this would cause a blinding central scotoma.
16 usually at the fovea or just outside a dense scotoma.
17 lue flashes presented within and outside the scotoma.
18 e prosthetic visual perception in the former scotoma.
19 resented with a persistent bilateral central scotoma.
20 twork is modified following the onset of the scotoma.
21 presumably with receptive fields within the scotoma.
22 tegorized as "normal," "relative," or "deep" scotoma.
23 tion task, using a gaze-contingent simulated scotoma.
24 oss of vision in the left eye with a central scotoma.
25 fixation sparing and supero-temporal central scotoma.
26 e central vision is blocked by an artificial scotoma.
27 d over weeks in the absence of the simulated scotoma.
28 by others for real or artificial peripheral scotomas.
29 al islands or extensive central rod and cone scotomas.
30 he RPE melanin; laminopathy was found in the scotomas.
31 on over pathologic and physiological retinal scotomas.
32 ence of physiological and pathologic retinal scotomas.
33 testing) to further characterize the visual scotomas.
34 ital cortex can produce visual phosphenes or scotomas.
35 in both eyes, often associated with central scotomas.
36 s with normal sensitivity, relative, or deep scotomas.
37 lthy females with acute onset of paracentral scotomas.
38 and presented with complaints of paracentral scotomas.
39 er nuclear layer atrophy with persistence of scotomas.
40 d grids is warranted in eyes with parafoveal scotomas.
41 set of reduced visual acuity and paracentral scotomas 2 weeks after their first infusion of atezolizu
42 d visual distortions (32.4% versus 13.3%) or scotomas (29.4% versus 6.7%), compared with a less speci
43 ting symptoms included blurred vision (82%), scotomas (56%), photopsias (43%), and floaters (23%).
45 Holmes combined observations of visual-field scotomas across brain-lesioned soldiers to produce a sch
46 e review of all patients who reported visual scotomas after 23- or 25-gauge PPV (Constellation Vision
49 to detect or discriminate motion within the scotoma, although they could discriminate moving from st
50 gressive loss of visual acuity, centrocoecal scotoma and bilateral temporal atrophy of the optic nerv
51 analyzed to produce retinal maps showing the scotoma and bivariate ellipses of fPRL and fingertip ret
52 patients presented with an acute paracentral scotoma and demonstrated a classic dark gray paracentral
53 reduced BOLD response in patients reporting scotoma and increased response in patients who only expe
54 ting the percentage of absolute and relative scotoma and mean central retinal sensitivity weighted by
57 l infarction that explained the visual field scotoma and the retinal nerve fibre layer defect in the
58 angle beta (+c) with the presence of central scotoma and visual field defect parameters, respectively
60 Retinal locations and sizes of subjects' scotomas and PRLs were mapped with a scanning laser opht
61 were recorded while subjects with bilateral scotomas and subjects with normal vision reached for and
62 y seen with visual symptoms of photopsia and scotoma, and most had a detectable lesion in the fundus
63 cientists who have recorded and analysed the scotomas, and in particular the expanding fortification
64 e observed centrally but not in regions with scotomas, and retinal pigment epithelial cells were visi
68 in reach-to-grasp movement caused by macular scotomas are greater in degree than those reported by ot
69 esion size influenced the course of absolute scotoma area (P = .0015), while lesion type had no effec
70 lyses were performed between the Amsler grid scotoma area and the 10-2 VF parameters (mean deviation
72 ivity, mean central retinal sensitivity, and scotoma area in dependence of age, lesion type, lesion s
73 al to or more than a doubling of the central scotoma area in response to a II2e test stimulus in the
75 ting characteristic curve of the Amsler grid scotoma area was 0.810 (95% confidence interval, 0.723-0
76 egative predictive values of the Amsler grid scotoma area were calculated with the 10-2 VF as the cli
81 in spared-V1 was shifted slightly toward the scotoma border in 2 of 5 patients compared with AS contr
82 was slightly increased in patients near the scotoma border; and (iii) pRF size in the contralesional
83 iseases had their dense and relative macular scotoma borders mapped with the scanning laser ophthalmo
88 who suffered from acute onset of paracentral scotoma, caused by branch retinal artery occlusion (BRAO
89 t is likely that factors other than fPRL and scotoma characteristics contribute to poorer maze-tracin
90 ity to improve the accuracy and precision of scotoma characterization relative to standard methods.
91 a new foveated ideal observer with a central scotoma correctly predicts that the human optimal point
92 r, laser treatment itself causes an absolute scotoma correlating with the site of the laser photocoag
96 visual impairment confronted with a central scotoma develop a preferred retinal locus to replace the
98 lation of the RF surround with an artificial scotoma did not have any additional aftereffects over th
99 l participant was masked using an artificial scotoma directly derived from clinical measurements in t
100 d HFMD, a 31-year old male noticed a central scotoma, distorted lines and loss of visual acuity (Snel
104 er a high-contrast stimulus or an artificial scotoma [equivalent to the stimulation of the receptive
106 MD (quadratic R(2)=0.681), followed by 10-2 scotoma extent (quadratic R(2)=0.611) and 10-2 scotoma m
107 the 10-2 VF parameters (mean deviation [MD], scotoma extent [number of test points with P < 0.01 in t
113 ed subjects, subjects with bilateral macular scotomas from AMD have reach-to-grasp movements with lon
115 this study: 30 patients affected by central scotoma, group 1, and 30 affected by peripheral scotoma,
119 tient initially presented with a paracentral scotoma in his right eye persisting for 7 days and scatt
121 er the maximum vertical extent of the larger scotoma in one eye and at an equal separation and eccent
124 teers (80%) successfully simulated a central scotoma in the first field and all 10 (100%) did so on i
128 shape and location of the aura wavefront or scotoma in the visual field at one minute intervals.
132 f the visual cortex corresponding to central scotomas in subjects with macular degeneration (MD) is c
136 adaptation, and produce dense, irreversible scotomas in the visual field, the initial decline in VA
137 ore peripheral eccentricities outside of rod scotoma influence in coherence, eccentricity representat
139 noted paracentral or cecocentral location of scotomas involving the inferior temporal visual field.
140 itial nasal defect (IND), initial parafoveal scotoma (IPFS), and combined nasal and parafoveal defect
142 esults suggest that motion processing in the scotoma is severely impaired, and that the puzzling disc
144 oss, superior peripheral defect, and central scotoma (listed in order of decreasing statistical signi
146 ere was a correspondence between suppression scotoma maps and the eye used to acquire peripheral targ
147 otoma extent (quadratic R(2)=0.611) and 10-2 scotoma mean depth (quadratic R(2)=0.299) (all P < 0.001
148 ts with P < 0.01 in total deviation map] and scotoma mean depth [mean sensitivity of test points with
151 ovea that corresponded with a dense relative scotoma noted on light-adapted static perimetry in the l
152 ment delayed time to development of absolute scotomas of all 16 central points (PM: HR: 0.57 [43% ris
153 plan delayed time to development of absolute scotomas of all 4 central macular points compared to sha
155 We demonstrate the importance of a visible scotoma on the speed of the adjustment and suggest a pos
156 ith early HCQ toxicity showed prominent ring scotomas on field testing without obvious SD-OCT abnorma
158 measured using a novel method for projecting scotomas onto the flattened cortical representation.
160 al-field testing on the locations of present scotomas or using frequency doubling technology may prov
162 Thresholds measured along ORTs showed dense scotoma over the tubule in all 4 participants, despite t
165 sitivity loss (mean deviation) and localized scotomas (pattern standard deviation) were worse in pati
166 y and contrast sensitivity loss, the central scotoma per se delayed hazard detection even though smal
167 nterdevice correlation, the repeatability of scotoma point detection, and any potential effects on fi
169 e test points directly adjacent to the dense scotoma points and to calculate their mean sensitivity (
170 mulation during the period of gray screen or scotoma presentation was associated with an increase in
171 esented to the lesion-affected visual field (scotoma) produced significant V1-independent fMRI activa
172 ve amplitudes) a higher mean rate of central scotoma progression compared with those patients with no
173 l field data, 8 patients with faster central scotoma progression rates had significantly worse scotop
174 and receptive field (RF) scaling in cortical scotoma projection zones (SPZs) the result of long-term
178 und that some patients with relative central scotomas reliably used two different preferred retinal l
180 stimulation over the visual cortex induced a scotoma, responses nonetheless were delayed significantl
181 eccentricity in the eye with a smaller or no scotoma RESULTS: In control subjects, alignment threshol
184 ors for normalized search duration including scotoma size and acuity, as well as interactions among s
189 ze and acuity, as well as interactions among scotoma size, age, acuity, and contrast (P < 0.05).
195 icantly with dense regions of the perimetric scotoma, suggesting that pRF analysis may help identify
196 field testing confirmed an inferior-temporal scotoma.Systemic work-up revealed elevated inflammatory
199 holds were no better over pathologic retinal scotomas than more intact, equally eccentric retina (P =
201 eptive fields within or at the border of the scotoma that responded consistently to drifting sinusoid
202 dus-related microperimetry results indicated scotomas that corresponded to the locations where RPE ce
204 nge of macular VF defects from clear arcuate scotomas to a papillofoveal horizontal step ("pistol bar
205 om full kinetic fields with relative central scotomas to remnant peripheral islands; from reduced ERG
206 ology (flash, zig-zag, strobe, scintillating scotoma, twinkling, other); (3) color (white, silver, ye
207 This subject had a PRL within the simulated scotoma under two conditions, but the percentage of tota
208 as always located within an area of relative scotoma, usually at the fovea or just outside a dense sc
210 ted in pattern-dependent distortion, and the scotoma was filled in with temporally adjacent stimuli,
214 sented with declining visual acuity, central scotomas, waxy disc pallor, attenuated vasculature, smal
217 tinal granulomatous mass/scar, vitritis, and scotoma were the most common ophthalmologic signs found
220 graphic) were found only within visual field scotomas, whereas changes of the log sensitivity paramet
222 idered "abnormal" if there was any perceived scotoma with missing or blurry grid lines within the cen
223 tre because of a deep unilateral paracentral scotoma with the presumptive diagnosis of a normal tensi
224 erimetry revealed a reduction in the central scotoma with three patients recovering normal foveal sen
225 acuity was 20/60, and she had midperipheral scotomas with retained function centrally and in the far
227 e completion of pathologic and physiological scotomas would be consistent with large-scale reorganiza