Journal international de pathologie ophtalmique

Intracranial Pressure and Retinitis Pigmentosa

Ramineni Sharath

Retinitis pigmentosa is the name commonly given to a group of disorders characterized over many years by progressive loss of visual field, night blindness, and degeneration of the retina. It is estimated that it influences about 1.6 million individuals overall. The principal appearance of the infection, regularly emerging during early youthfulness, is night visual deficiency (nyctalopia) because of the impeded pole photoreceptors, trailed by reformist demise of these phones. In this way, patients experience a limitation of the visual field (exclusive focus), due to additional deficiency of bars in the fringe retina, where these phones prevail. Afterward, patients go through a reformist decay of visual sharpness in the focal field, and disabled chromatic separation, because of the steady downfall of cones.

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