111 research outputs found
High Dose Botulinum Toxin For Benign Essential Blepharospasm
Botulinum toxin is a primary treatment for benign essential blepharospasm (BEB). Standard starting doses for BEB range from 25-50 units for both eyes. There is little data available on the use of doses of 90 units or greater
Optic Neuropathy After LASIK
Laser in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) is an increasingly common ophthalmic procedure done to correct myopia, hyperopia and astigmatism. Most complications relate to creation of the flap or are optical in natureglare etc. Optic neuropathy has rarely been reported as a complication of LASIK
Walsh & Hoyt: Toxoplasmosis: Clinical Manifestations
The symptoms and signs of patients with toxoplasmosis depend on three factors: whether the condition is congenital or acquired; whether the condition occurs in an immunocompetent or an immunodeficient patient; and whether the condition is limited to the eye or is systemic. Thus, most authors recognize four groups of patients: (a) immunocompetent patients with acquired infection; (b) immunodeficient patients with acquired or reactivated infection; (c) patients with congenital infection; and (d) patients with ocular toxoplasmosis
Walsh & Hoyt: Toxoplasmosis: Treatment and Prognosis
The lack of controlled clinical trials and the variable course of toxoplasmosis in both immunocompetent and immunodeficient persons have resulted in uncertainty and controversy regarding specific indications for treatment, appropriate drugs, and even the duration of treatment of this disease. Although the role of treatment is clearer in CNS toxoplasmosis and in ocular toxoplasmosis in immunosuppressed patients, there is no clear evidence of the role of treatment in ocular toxoplasmosis in immunocompetent patients
Walsh & Hoyt: Pathology
The neuropathologic changes of babesiosis are poorly documented and come from observations primarily made in animals. Capillaries in the brain, retina, and ciliary body show swollen endothelial cells and are filled with erythrocytes parasitized by the organisms
Walsh & Hoyt: Toxoplasmosis
Toxoplasma is an obligate intracellular organism that is a member of the class of protozoa called Sporozoa. It thus is a member of the same class as Babesia and Plasmodium species (discussed earlier). There is only one species-Toxoplasma gondii-and all strains appear antigenically similar. The name Toxoplasma gondii is derived from the crescent shape of the trophozoite form of the organism (from the Greek word toxon, meaning ‘‘bow'') and from the North American rodent ‘‘gondi,'' the animal in which it was first described (13,14,624)
Walsh & Hoyt: Microsporidia
The phylum Microsporidia consists of about 150 genera and more than 1200 species. Organisms belonging to this phylum are called microsporidia. Microsporidia are obligate intracellular, spore-forming protozoa. They are ubiquitous in nature, but they were not recognized as human pathogens until the late 1980s
Walsh & Hoyt: Toxoplasmosis: Epidemiology
Infection by Toxoplasma gondii is called toxoplasmosis. This condition is a worldwide zoonosis. The organism infects herbivorous, omnivorous, and carnivorous animals, including all orders of mammals. Serologic surveys indicate that 22.5% of healthy adults in the United States have been infected with Toxoplasma. In some parts of Brazil, seroprevalence approaches 100%
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