The neuro-ophthalmologic examination provides an enormous amount of information about
the 40% of fibers that provide afferent and efferent limbs of the visual, pupillary,
and ocular motor pathways. A few tools and the correct testing approach will maximize
the value of this examination. This chapter provides step-by-step examination methods
and points out some of the common errors that are made.
Relative afferent pupillary defect - Horner's syndrome - Adies tonic pupil - visual
acuity - color vision - Amsler grid - optokinetic nystagmus - ophthalmoscopy - visual
fields - saccades - pursuit - hippus - Argyll Robertson pupil - pharmacologic blockade
- cocaine test - hydroxyamphetamine test - pseudo-Horner's syndrome