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Eye Movement Disorders in Clinical Practice

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Eye Movement Disorders in Clinical Practice

Eye Movement Disorders in Clinical Practice
By Visit Amazon’s Shirley H. Wray Page, search results, Learn about Author Central, Shirley H. Wray

  • Hardcover: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press; 1 edition (January 30, 2014)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0199921806
  • ISBN-13: 978-0199921805
  • In Eye Movement Disorders in Clinical Practice, a leading expert with over thirty years of teaching experience in neurology and neuro-ophthalmology offers comprehensive instruction on the diagnosis and treatment of all varieties of eye movement disorders. This important new text reflects the importance of correlating clinical signs of disorders in the oculomotor system with their neuroanatomic and neurophysiologic architecture. With its focus on signs and symptoms, the book advances lesion localization of eye movement disorders as the central clinical concern. The reader is also presented with a fresh review of bedside examination techniques in the ER, ICU, and walk-in clinic; productive ways of taking a clinical history; sign interpretation; source lesion localization; and, where appropriate, therapy.

    Unlike most of the titles on eye movement disorders, this book’s chapters are arranged according to objective signs – like ptosis, neuromuscular syndromes, dizziness, vertigo, and syndromes of the medulla – rather than disease entities. This emphasis on the topographic analysis of symptoms and signs is contrary to the prevailing clinical approach in which responsibility for therapy typically drives the clinician to arrive at an etiological diagnosis as rapidly as possible. At risk in this process is nothing less than the art of clinical medicine. One of the aims of this book is to reverse this process, and move clinicians back to the observation and interpretation of signs.

    The text features over 100 clinical cases, each one challenging the reader to determine the neuroanatomical location of the patient’s lesion. This exercise provides the anatomical guidance needed to make critical diagnostic and management decisions in patients who often present with abnormal eye movements. In addition, a supplementary DVD provides videos illustrating more than 50 types of eye movement disorders, their signs, their symptoms, and the relevant diagnosis.

    Dynamic and intellectually stimulating, Eye Movement Disorders in Clinical Practice is essential for any reader wanting to better understand eye movement disorders.

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