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Information Journal Paper

Title

Glaucomatous Optic Neuropathy: The Dark Side of the Moon

Author(s)

YAZDANI SHAHIN

Pages

  148-150

Keywords

Not Registered.

Abstract

 Glaucoma is an enigmatic eye condition and serves as a perfect example for an ocular disease with complex pathophysiology, multifactorial nature, and close interplay with systemic factors. Glaucomatous optic neuropathy (GON) is also probably the most important and prevalent eye condition linked to events within the central nervous system (CNS). None of these is an overstatement when one recalls that the optic nerve head, the site where GON is diagnosed and monitored, is only one small sector of the second cranial nerve, otherwise known as the optic nerve. The major portion of the optic nerve courses in the CNS and acquires physiologic features of neurons residing in the CNS, for example myelination of fibers, just posterior to the lamina cribrosa (LC). . .

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    APA: Copy

    YAZDANI, SHAHIN. (2021). Glaucomatous Optic Neuropathy: The Dark Side of the Moon. JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMIC AND VISION RESEARCH, 16(2), 148-150. SID. https://sid.ir/paper/975110/en

    Vancouver: Copy

    YAZDANI SHAHIN. Glaucomatous Optic Neuropathy: The Dark Side of the Moon. JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMIC AND VISION RESEARCH[Internet]. 2021;16(2):148-150. Available from: https://sid.ir/paper/975110/en

    IEEE: Copy

    SHAHIN YAZDANI, “Glaucomatous Optic Neuropathy: The Dark Side of the Moon,” JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMIC AND VISION RESEARCH, vol. 16, no. 2, pp. 148–150, 2021, [Online]. Available: https://sid.ir/paper/975110/en

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