[Optic nerve tract injuries (author's transl)]. 1982

J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot

The length of the optic nerve tracts exposes them to damage from cranial injuries. The intraorbital segment of the optic nerve is vulnerable, as bone protection is incomplete and frontal injuries frequent, while indirect lesions of the optic nerve due to trauma raise diagnostic problems in comatose patients. Study of photomotor reflexes and VEP supplies valuable information. Unilateral mydriasis is not a sign of blindness, but of a lesion of the IIIrd nerve, which, may be compressed during engagement of the temporal lobe in the tentorium cerebelli region. The mydriasis indicates the side of the lesion and the need for urgent treatments. Surgical decompression of the optic canal should be performed for indirect optic nerve injuries when visual deficiency appears or becomes worse during the few days following the trauma. Visual loss noted most characteristically in chiasma lesions is bitemporal hemianopsia. In cases of optic nerve injuries, temporal campimetric deficiency in the other eye is evidence of an associated chiasma lesion. The chiasma may also be damaged following apparently mild frontal blows. Campimetric deficiency in retrochiasmatic lesions indicates the side of the lesion and, on some occasions, its precise location.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D009897 Optic Chiasm The X-shaped structure formed by the meeting of the two optic nerves. At the optic chiasm the fibers from the medial part of each retina cross to project to the other side of the brain while the lateral retinal fibers continue on the same side. As a result each half of the brain receives information about the contralateral visual field from both eyes. Chiasma Opticum,Optic Chiasma,Optic Decussation,Chiasm, Optic,Chiasma Opticums,Chiasma, Optic,Chiasmas, Optic,Chiasms, Optic,Decussation, Optic,Decussations, Optic,Optic Chiasmas,Optic Chiasms,Optic Decussations,Opticum, Chiasma,Opticums, Chiasma
D005129 Eye Foreign Bodies Inanimate objects that become enclosed in the eye. Eye Foreign Object,Eye Foreign Body,Eye Foreign Objects,Foreign Bodies, Eye,Foreign Body, Eye,Foreign Object, Eye,Foreign Objects, Eye
D006406 Hematoma A collection of blood outside the BLOOD VESSELS. Hematoma can be localized in an organ, space, or tissue. Hematomas
D006408 Hematoma, Subdural Accumulation of blood in the SUBDURAL SPACE between the DURA MATER and the arachnoidal layer of the MENINGES. This condition primarily occurs over the surface of a CEREBRAL HEMISPHERE, but may develop in the spinal canal (HEMATOMA, SUBDURAL, SPINAL). Subdural hematoma can be classified as the acute or the chronic form, with immediate or delayed symptom onset, respectively. Symptoms may include loss of consciousness, severe HEADACHE, and deteriorating mental status. Hemorrhage, Subdural,Subdural Hematoma,Subdural Hematoma, Traumatic,Hematoma, Traumatic Subdural,Hematomas, Subdural,Hematomas, Traumatic Subdural,Hemorrhages, Subdural,Subdural Hematomas,Subdural Hematomas, Traumatic,Subdural Hemorrhage,Subdural Hemorrhages,Traumatic Subdural Hematoma,Traumatic Subdural Hematomas
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D012886 Skull The SKELETON of the HEAD including the FACIAL BONES and the bones enclosing the BRAIN. Calvaria,Cranium,Calvarium,Skulls
D020221 Optic Nerve Injuries Injuries to the optic nerve induced by a trauma to the face or head. These may occur with closed or penetrating injuries. Relatively minor compression of the superior aspect of orbit may also result in trauma to the optic nerve. Clinical manifestations may include visual loss, PAPILLEDEMA, and an afferent pupillary defect. Optic Nerve Trauma,Optic Neuropathy, Traumatic,Second Cranial Nerve Trauma,Cranial Nerve II Injuries,Optic Nerve Avulsion,Optic Nerve Contusion,Optic Nerve Transection,Second Cranial Nerve Injuries,Trauma, Second Cranial Nerve,Avulsion, Optic Nerve,Avulsions, Optic Nerve,Contusion, Optic Nerve,Contusions, Optic Nerve,Injuries, Optic Nerve,Injury, Optic Nerve,Nerve Avulsion, Optic,Nerve Avulsions, Optic,Nerve Contusion, Optic,Nerve Contusions, Optic,Nerve Injuries, Optic,Nerve Injury, Optic,Nerve Transection, Optic,Nerve Transections, Optic,Nerve Trauma, Optic,Nerve Traumas, Optic,Neuropathies, Traumatic Optic,Neuropathy, Traumatic Optic,Optic Nerve Avulsions,Optic Nerve Contusions,Optic Nerve Injury,Optic Nerve Transections,Optic Nerve Traumas,Optic Neuropathies, Traumatic,Transection, Optic Nerve,Transections, Optic Nerve,Trauma, Optic Nerve,Traumas, Optic Nerve,Traumatic Optic Neuropathies,Traumatic Optic Neuropathy

Related Publications

J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
March 1977, No to shinkei = Brain and nerve,
J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
June 1978, No shinkei geka. Neurological surgery,
J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
May 1979, MMW, Munchener medizinische Wochenschrift,
J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
August 1980, [Zhonghua yan ke za zhi] Chinese journal of ophthalmology,
J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
October 1979, Klinika oczna,
J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
January 1973, Revista espanola de oto-neuro-oftalmologia y neurocirugia,
J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
January 1979, Klinika oczna,
J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
December 1976, No shinkei geka. Neurological surgery,
J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
May 1974, Klinische Monatsblatter fur Augenheilkunde,
J Michiels, and M P Waterschoot
July 1976, Albrecht von Graefes Archiv fur klinische und experimentelle Ophthalmologie. Albrecht von Graefe's archive for clinical and experimental ophthalmology,
Copied contents to your clipboard!