Indian Journal of Ophthalmology (Jan 2014)
Neuro-ophthalmology as a career
- Arielle Spitze,
- Nagham Al-Zubidi,
- Peter Lam,
- Sushma Yalamanchili,
- Andrew G Lee
Affiliations
- Arielle Spitze
- Nagham Al-Zubidi
- Peter Lam
- Sushma Yalamanchili
- Andrew G Lee
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.4103/0301-4738.146007
- Journal volume & issue
-
Vol. 62,
no. 10
pp. 1013 – 1014
Abstract
This essay was written to discuss the reasoning behind the personal decisions made by 2 current neuro-ophthalmology fellows to pursue neuro-ophthalmology as a career. It is meant to enlighten the reader about what role neuro-ophthalmologists play in clinical practice, what makes neuro-ophthalmology unique to all other sub-specialties, and how this contributes to making neuro-ophthalmology not only one of the most medically interesting, yet rewarding sub-specialties in ophthalmology.
Keywords
- Atypical optic neuritis
- autoimmunity
- multiple sclerosis
- neuromyelitis optica
- neuroretinitis
- optic neuritis
- optic neuropathy
- Acetylcholine
- autoimmune
- neuro-muscular junction
- ocular myasthenia gravis
- Cortical visual impairment
- hypoxia
- hypoglycemia
- optic atrophy
- prematurity
- periventricular leukomalacia
- Idiopathic intracranial hypertension
- pseudotumor cerebri
- treatment
- Chemosis
- optic neuropathy
- strabismus
- thyroid eye disease
- Childhood optic atrophy
- clinical profile
- etiology
- India
- Abducens palsy
- computed tomography
- cranial nerve palsy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- mononeuropathy
- neuroimaging
- sixth nerve palsy
- Fellowship
- neuro-ophthalmology
- ophthalmology
- sub-specialty