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- Congenital Mydriasis Is an Extremely Rare Ophthalmic Condition, Defined by a Fixed and Dilated Pupil That Presents at Birth and Has Other Normal Seeing Eye
- Adrenergic Agents Adrenergic Agonists Directly Stimulate the Α-Adrenergic Receptors of the Iris Dilator Muscle, Resulting in Mydriasis Without Cycloplegia
- Anisocoria Secondary to Inadvertent Contact with Scopolamine Patch Janki Shah,1 Alice Jiang,1 Zoltan Fekete2
- Disorders of Pupillary Function, Accommodation, and Lacrimation
- Paralytic Strabismus: Third, Fourth, and Sixth Nerve Palsy
- ID: Pupillary Mydriasis and Recovery After Transscleral Micropulse
- What You Can See in the Eye of a Minipig (The Ophthalmic Examination in the Ellegaard Göttingen Minipig)
- Pupil Dilatation in the Pseudoexfoliation Syndrome
- The Relationship Between Pupil Diameter and Decentration in Myopia
- Part Ii – Neurological Disorders
- Neurologic Causes of Canine Anisocoria
- Drug-Induced Acute Angle-Closure Glaucoma: Raising Your Index of Suspicion
- Diagnosis of Pupillary Disorders
- Parasympathetic NS
- An Overview of the Third, Fourth and Sixth Cranial Nerve Palsies Palsies of the Third, Fourth and Sixth Cranial Nerves Have Ophthalmological Consequences
- Bilateral Congenital Mydriasis Br J Ophthalmol: First Published As 10.1136/Bjo.76.10.632 on 1 October 1992
- Understanding Blindness in Cats
- Plus-Minus Lid Syndrome