Pupillary Asymmetry (Anisocoria)
Anisocoria refers to asymmetry in pupillary diameter between the two eyes. When pathologic, anisocoria indicates a disorder of pupillary constriction or dilation. If the disorder is of pupillary constriction, the…
Anisocoria refers to asymmetry in pupillary diameter between the two eyes. When pathologic, anisocoria indicates a disorder of pupillary constriction or dilation. If the disorder is of pupillary constriction, the…
A. While technically not a hallucination but rather a distortion of an otherwise real image, metamorphopsia is a particular type of visual disturbance characterized by wavy or warped vision. It…
A. The visual fields for the right and left eye have significant but not complete overlap with one another. Because the temporal visual field for each eye is larger than…
Transient visual loss that has resolved by the time of presentation is often challenging to evaluate, as the examination is often normal, and both benign and dangerous etiologies are possible….
Rapidly progressive dementia refers to cognitive and/or behavioral deficits that evolve over weeks to months, much more rapidly than with traditional neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer dementia. Treatable conditions are…
Memory loss that develops over several months to years is most commonly seen in older adults and often prompts concern about the possibility of Alzheimer disease. However, other conditions should…
Abrupt memory loss developing over minutes to days can be a striking clinical picture. Often the symptom is initially mistaken for a confusional state. While some causes of abrupt memory…