| Literature DB >> 29422846 |
Ryuichiro Hayashi1, Shigeki Yamaguchi1, Toshio Narimatsu2, Hiroshi Miyata2, Yasushi Katsumata3, Masaru Mimura4.
Abstract
We report a 60-year-old woman with posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) who presented with left homonymous hemianopsia persisting for 5 years; the patient's condition was observed using static, but not kinetic, perimetry. This statokinetic dissociation of hemianopsia, which is often called Riddoch syndrome, might have been caused by a dysfunction of the right primary visual and visual association cortices, representing a functional imbalance within a disturbed visual cortex. In patients with PCA and visual field defects, both static and kinetic perimetry may be useful for understanding the extent of degeneration in the visual cortex, in addition to examinations of unilateral neglect.Entities:
Keywords: Homonymous hemianopsia; Posterior cortical atrophy; Riddoch phenomenon; Statokinetic dissociation
Year: 2017 PMID: 29422846 PMCID: PMC5803707 DOI: 10.1159/000481304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Neurol ISSN: 1662-680X
Fig. 1.Humphrey visual field tests showed incongruent left hemianopia (a) with normal Goldmann visual fields (b) at the initial examination. After 5 years, axial MR images showed right dominant bilateral occipito-parieto-temporal atrophy (c). Using the easy z-score imaging system (see text), SPECT scans revealed right dominant hemispheric hypoperfusion, with severe hypoperfusion in the occipito-parietal cortex (d).