Déviation conjuguée

From WikiProjectMed
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Déviation conjuguée
Differential diagnosisStroke (in the middle cerebral artery)

Déviation conjuguée, also termed conjugate eye deviation (CED) or ipsilesional gaze shift, is a medical sign indicating brain damage (e.g. a stroke in the middle cerebral artery[1]), wherein the pupils of the eye tend to move toward the side of the body where the lesion is located. The symptom was described by Swiss neurologist Jean-Louis Prévost in 1868.

References

  1. ^ Hildebrandt H, Schütze C, Ebke M, Brunner-Beeg F, Eling P (December 2005). "Visual search for item- and array-centered locations in patients with left middle cerebral artery stroke". Neurocase. 11 (6): 416–26. doi:10.1080/13554790500263511. PMID 16393755. S2CID 10699130.