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"No attainment is ever final" Vascular disorders of the optic disc
and nerve are important not only to the ophthalmologist but also to
the neurologist and the internist. To the first specialty group
they represent one cause of blindness or severe visual impairment;
to the second group the optic disc edema and optic atrophy seen in
these disorders can pose serious problems of diagnosis, or give
indica tions of the involvement of the cerebral circulation; while
to the last group they are frequently indicative of systemic
disease, particularly of the cardiovas cular system. Recent
advances in our knowledge of the blood supply of the optic nerve
head have shed a significant new light on the subject. With the
recent advent of fluorescein fundus angiography, an extra dimension
has been added to the study of the ocular and optic disc
circulations, and we have entered into a new era in the
understanding of ocular vascular disorders "in vivo". In the
pre-angiography era, postmortem injection studies, although very
valuable, did not completely reveal the vascular pattern of the
optic disc in the living, in health, and disease. The
ophthalmoscope, without doubt, has been valuable in assessing optic
disc lesions, but could not give us informa tion on the circulation
of the eye and optic disc "in vivo".
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