stroke:A letter to the editor is presented in response to the article "Visual impairment following stroke: do stroke patients require vision assessment?" by Rowe et al., published in the previous issue.doi:10.1093/ageing/afp117F. O. Ijaola...
A letter to the editor is presented in response to the article "Visual impairment following stroke: do stroke patients require vision assessment?" by Rowe ... F Rowe,D Brand,CA Jackson,... - 《Age & Ageing》 被引量: 138发表: 2008年 A Vision for What Science Education Should Be Like ...
Other problems.Other vision problems for which vision therapy may be effective include visual-perceptual disorders, vision problems associated with developmental disabilities and vision problems associated with acquired brain injury (such as from a stroke). What vision therapy isn't Vision therapy is not...
Equally, fall risk assessment is of notable importance and pragmatically useful in people with a movement disorder, such as Parkinson’s disease (PD) [7,8,9] or Stroke [10,11,12,13] due to observable functional deficits in motor control. Additionally, assessing fall risk is equally important...
Visual impairments (VIs) affect 60% of stroke survivors and have negative consequences for rehabilitation and quality of life poststroke. Symptoms of VIs post stroke are difficult to identify for stroke survivors and health care professionals without usi
Testing for acuity traditionally relies on high contrast static discrimination in the central visual area (fovea). There are no tests of dynamic discrimination, low contrast performance or response to objects first identified in the periphery that are practicable to apply to the routine assessment of...
Variability was then analyzed (1) as repeated measures and (2) as range variability (ie, the absolute difference between the lowest and highest detection rates51) by first determining the range variability for each patient and then calculating group differences. Quality-of-Life Assessment Vision-...
Specialty Vision Examinations, including Assessment of Visual Skills for Academic and School Performance, ADHD, Reading, Sports Achievement, Autism, Lazy Eye, and many other Functional Vision Related Conditions Vision Therapy and Sports Vision Training for Children and Adults - All Ages ...
19 Although some NIHSS training films demonstrate this assessment by asking the patient to state how many fingers he or she is able to see in each field, this often leads to confusion. For example, if the patient says “2 fingers” when 3 fingers were actually held up, some examiners ...
The time points for training and assessment can be seen from Fig. 2. At the baseline, participants’ ocular health will be assessed, including (1) visual acuity (VA): tested monocularly and binocularly using the Early Treatment of Diabetic Retinopathy Study (ETDRS) chart with best-corrected ...