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PARALYSIS OF THE MOVEMENT OF CONVERGENCE OF THE EYES.
HENRY JULER, F.R.C.S.
Arch Neurol. 1972;26(1):91-93.
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THE paralyses of the muscles of the eye,1 as of those of other parts of the body, arise either from central or peripheral causes. Until the last few years this fact appears to have been ignored, for the descriptions are devoted almost exclusively to the paralyses of the third pair of nerves, and the symptomatology is exactly deduced from the distribution of these nerves and from the action of each muscle. Several works, however, have been published on this question, notably those on conjugate paralysis, paralysis of the sixth pair, and
Hutchinson's ophthalmoplegia.
I may here be permitted to remark that in several publications, of which the first appeared in 1877, I have endeavoured to establish the distinction between peripheral and central paralyses. Hitherto these subjects have not seriously occupied the attention of oculists, but at the present time, thanks to the efforts of Prof. Mauthner, this gap in
. . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]
Footnotes
Reprinted from Brain 9:330-341, 1886.
The cases on which this paper was written were observed, either in Dr. Parinaud's ophthalmic clinique or in the Salpêtriére, where the author fills the post of Ophthalmologist to the Neurological Department of Prof. Charcot....
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