Brain-Eye love relationship is one of the most beautiful things in the world. 


Everytime I see a bitemporal hemianopsia my step1 brain goes... ok, pituitary ademona.
And then my heart goes through all of these thoughts.
A
of peri and post VMR Reflections.



Everytime I see a bitemporal hemianopsia my step1 brain goes... ok, pituitary ademona.
And then my heart goes through all of these thoughts.
A

Because we see the world through light that then travels through our brain flipped both horizontally and vertically and then our brain has to make sense out of it...It would make sense that sensory and ultimately motor pathways also decussate.
More here: https://bit.ly/2KNe1mj
More here: https://bit.ly/2KNe1mj
Evolutionary the eye is so important that it has popped up multiple times in different space/time throughout history. As many as 40 different times! This explains how although most animals have eyes they are so different in function and form.
More here: https://go.nature.com/3rSmJ35
More here: https://go.nature.com/3rSmJ35
And bc its soo important to us, our brain map of what we see is huge! Its so big you could have a PCA stroke affecting your occipital lobe and get homonymous hemianopsia w/macular sparing Bc the macula actually has a different vascular supply.
More here: https://bit.ly/3b36jyY
More here: https://bit.ly/3b36jyY
And how all of this is a result of heritable variations from random mutations thousands of years ago and sprung out with no conscious idea it would make answering board questions easier....
So yeah.... no simple sign, symptom or diagnosis in medicine.
So yeah.... no simple sign, symptom or diagnosis in medicine.
Amazing discussion today @rabihmgeha @kiaracamacho96 @Rafameed @Flower_freeland @melashwal97 and Hannah... promise I was paying attention while meditating all of this jajaja.
And @AaronLBerkowitz now i can't stop thinking neuro jaja!
And @AaronLBerkowitz now i can't stop thinking neuro jaja!