Feb
14
2011

image via www.nlm.nih.gov
Studies have established that elderly people with age related macular degeneration are more likely to experience strokes. A new study presented at the American Stroke Association’s International Stroke Conference 2011 is the first to determine the type of stroke that people with AMD are likely to suffer.
Researchers looked at two kinds of strokes: those caused by brain hemorrhage (aka a “bleeding stroke”) and those caused by brain infarction (a blood clot).
Macular degeneration is associated with brain hemorrhages rather than brain infarction.
Scientists involved with the study urge AMD patients not to worry that they will inevitably experience hemorrhaging in the brain. They state that more research is necessary. One doctor speculates that AMD does not cause bleeding stokes. Instead, the two medical conditions may stem from a common cause. Source: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/216090.php
Learn about how to prevent and even reverse macular degeneration.
Dec
03
2010

image via fbi.gov
The after-effects of a stroke can be devastating. Among the problems experienced by stroke patients are vision issues, which often go undetected when communication abilities are compromised or because patients do not associate new eye problems with the stroke.
Stroke patients are likely to experience visual field loss when the pathways that deliver information from eyes to brain are damaged. New research published in the International Journal of Stroke also shows that stroke patients also can suffer from problems with eye movement when the relevant nerves are compromised.
Researchers recommend eye exercises to strengthen the eye muscles of stroke victims, especially to those who develop problems with reading. Source: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/210028.php
For a free guide to eye exercises that can help strength everyone’s eyes, please visit our website.
May
28
2009
Although open-angle glaucoma (OAG) has been previously associated with some of the risk factors of stroke development, researchers at the Taipei Medical University in Taipei, Taiwan have now linked OAG with an increased risk of stroke development.
Researchers collected data from the 1,073,891 subjects in the Taiwan National Health Insurance Research Database. They compared 4032 patients with a diagnosis of OAG to 20,160 patients without OAG over a five year period.
Of the group of patients with OAG, 14.9% had strokes within the 5-year follow-up period, compared with 9.5% of patients in the comparison group. After adjusting for patients’ demographic characteristics, patients with OAG were found to have a 1.52-fold higher risk of having a stroke than the matched comparison cohort.
Study authors concluded that patients with OAG demonstrated a significantly increased risk of stroke development during the 5-year follow-up period.
Learn more about glaucoma including self-help tips
Read other studies about glaucoma
SOURCE: “Open-Angle Glaucoma and the Risk of Stroke Development. A 5-Year Population-Based Follow-Up Study”, Ho, et al, PubMed, 2009 May 21, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19461039
Oct
25
2008
Hemianopia is a blindness in one half of the visual field due to damage of the optic pathways in the brain. This damage can result from brain injuries caused by stroke, tumor or trauma. A patient with hemianopia may be unaware of what he or she cannot see and may frequently bump into walls, trip over objects or walk into people on the side in which the visual field is missing.
Prism eyeglasses were invented by Dr. Eli Peli of the Schepens Eye Research Institute, an affiliate of Harvard Medical School, to assist patients with hemianopia. Dr. Peli attached small high power prisms on the top and bottom of one spectacle lens, leaving the center of the lens untouched. The prisms pull in images missing from the visual field above and below the line of sight on the side of the vision loss. The prisms alert the patient to the presence of a potential obstacle, so that the patient can then move his/her head and eyes to examine the prism-captured image directly through the clear center of the lens.
In the trial, 32 of 43 participants (74%) who were fitted with prism glasses continued wearing the glasses at week six; at 12 months, 20 (47%) were still wearing the spectacles eight hours daily and rating them as “very helpful” for obstacle avoidance.
A larger study is currently underway to evaluate a newer model of the eyeglasses.
SOURCE: “Community-Based Trial of a Peripheral Prism Visual Field Expansion Device for Hemianopia”, Bowers, et al, Archives of Ophthalmology, 2008, vol. 126, no5, pp. 657-664.
Oct
12
2008
Study could lead to new therapies to help improve sight following trauma or stroke
Neuroscientists studying the mind’s ability to process images have completed the first empirical study to demonstrate how nerve cells in the visual cortex adapt to changing images.
In the study, researchers at the University of Texas Health Science Center measured the effects of visual stimulation on the responses of multiple neurons whose electrical activity was measured simultaneously in animals. They examined the responses of a population of cells in visual cortex to dynamic stimuli (movie sequences displayed on a video monitor).
Results showed that brief exposure or adaptation to a fixed stimulus caused changes in the degree of cooperation between individual neurons and improved the efficiency with which the population of cells encoded information.
“Our perception of the environment relies on the capacity of neural networks to adapt rapidly to changes in incoming stimuli,” wrote senior author Valentin Dragoi. “It is increasingly being realized that the neural code is adaptive, that is, sensory neurons change their responses and selectivity in a dynamic manner to match the changes in input stimuli.” The neural code is the set of rules that converts electrical impulses in the brain into thoughts, memories and decisions.
“Right now, we don’t know the causes of brain illnesses such as Alzheimer’s disease or disorders caused by trauma,” Dragoi said. “However, it is our belief that understanding not only how individual neurons work, but how they cooperate with their neighbors to impact the functions of the brain involved in diseases may help develop better diagnostic tools and therapies to improve visual function following trauma, stroke or disease, or even prevent brain disorder.”
SOURCE: “Populations Of Brain Cells Adapt To Changing Images,” Dragoi, et al., Nature 452, 220-224 (13 March 2008).