Nystagmus
Published 2018-04-20
All Comments (21)
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Thanks for an awesome presentation. I am an ER dr and this is what ER physicians need to know !!
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Thank you. For those not in the know- Nystagmus is when there is involuntary oscillating movements of the eye- it can be horizontal, vertical or rotator in origin.
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He looks so happy showing off his knowledge.
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I am a neurologist in making, So lucid , eloquent. Thanks a lot sir. ππ
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Dr. Lee thank you! You inspire me ππ»ππ»ππ»
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Thank you SO MUCH for explaining this in a way that makes sense.
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Hello Dr. Lee, I really appreciate your videos, they are incredible and so cool. Thank you I was wondering if you could do a little bit of more videos on Nystagmus- eg. Bruns Nystagmus, Latent Nystagmus, Rebound Nystagmus...As I have really hard time to differentiate these. Thank you
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I have nystagmus and itβs not that bad itβs just annoying how everyone says "Hey your eyes are twitching." And then I have to explain nystagmus
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So, an animation model would be great to help grasp the concept.
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For some reason, I always end up watching your videos and I'm just preparing for step 2. Maybe I'm complicating my existence but I find these videos awesome.
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Above all- I would to thank you so much for this channel! It has been so helpfu!l And I have a question as well ;) I work with kids with low vision. Sometimes I notice they have binocular nystagmus, eventhough they have clearly monocular problem- a retinoblastoma in one eye, the other eye unaffected, but nystagmus is present, even with an obvious compensatory head position. Another case- monocular congenital cataract, the other eye with no sings of any pathology, but very mild binocular nystagmus is present as well... I have seen just a few of such cases, but still- do you have any explanation? Thanks a lot!
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Thank u from the bottom of my heart. I learnt so much Dr Lee!
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Thank you Dr Lee for making our lives easier
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I have nystagmus and Iβm trying to educate myself more on it, thank you!!
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This is an excellent video. It really clarifies a quite challenging topic!
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Perfect, what did Dr Lee say about the non localizing form: MRI, drug and... ''Postier Falser'' ???
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A small correction: The gaze evoked component of Bruns nystagmus is actually of slower frequency and larger amplitude, characteristic of a cerebellar lesion. This is in contrast to the primary position, fine, high freq, small amplitude nystagmus beating away from the side of vestibular lesion. Thank you for the video!
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On a different level. Thank you
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Thanks sir.. Your video's lecture are very informative and helpful
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Superb