hemeralopia

inability to see clearly in bright light and is the exact opposite of Nyctalopia

DBpedia resource is: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nyctalopia

Abstract is: Nyctalopia (/ˌnɪktəˈloʊpiə/; from Ancient Greek νύκτ- (núkt-) 'night', ἀλαός (alaós) 'blind, invisible', and ὄψ (óps) 'eye'), also called night-blindness, is a condition making it difficult or impossible to see in relatively low light. It is a symptom of several eye diseases. Night blindness may exist from birth, or be caused by injury or malnutrition (for example, vitamin A deficiency). It can be described as insufficient adaptation to darkness. The most common cause of nyctalopia is retinitis pigmentosa, a disorder in which the rod cells in the retina gradually lose their ability to respond to the light. Patients with this genetic condition have progressive nyctalopia and eventually, their daytime vision may also be affected. In X-linked congenital stationary night blindness, from birth the rods either do not work at all, or work very little, but the condition does not get worse. Another cause of night blindness is a deficiency of retinol, or vitamin A1, found in fish oils, liver and dairy products. The opposite problem, the inability to see in bright light, is known as hemeralopia and is much rarer. Since the outer area of the retina is made up of more rods than cones, loss of peripheral vision often results in night blindness. Individuals with night blindness not only see poorly at night but also require extra time for their eyes to adjust from brightly lit areas to dim ones. Contrast vision may also be greatly reduced. Rods contain a receptor-protein called rhodopsin. When light falls on rhodopsin, it undergoes a series of conformational changes ultimately generating electrical signals which are carried to the brain via the optic nerve. In the absence of light, rhodopsin is regenerated. The body synthesizes rhodopsin from vitamin A, which is why a deficiency in vitamin A causes poor night vision. Refractive "vision correction" surgery (especially PRK with the complication of "haze") may rarely cause a reduction in best night-time acuity due to the impairment of contrast sensitivity function (CSF) which is induced by intraocular light-scatter resulting from surgical intervention in the natural structural integrity of the cornea.

DBpedia resource is: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hemeralopia

Abstract is: Hemeralopia (from Greek ημέρα hemera, "day", and αλαός alaos, "blindness") is the inability to see clearly in bright light and is the exact opposite of nyctalopia (night blindness), the inability to see clearly in low light. Hemera was the Greek goddess of day, and Nyx was the goddess of night. However, it has been used in an opposite sense by many non-English-speaking doctors. It can be described as insufficient adaptation to bright light. It is also called "heliophobia" and "day blindness". In hemeralopia, daytime vision gets worse, characterised by photoaversion (dislike/avoidance of light) rather than photophobia (eye discomfort/pain in light), which is typical of inflammations of eye. Nighttime vision largely remains unchanged due to the use of rods as opposed to cones (during the day), which are affected by hemeralopia and in turn degrade the daytime optical response. Hence, many patients feel they see better at dusk than in daytime.

hemeralopia is …
sublass of (P279):
eye diseaseQ3041498

External links are
P508BNCF Thesaurus ID42270
P646Freebase ID/m/05b9zn
P494ICD-10H53.1
P4229ICD-10-CMH53.1
P7807ICD-11 (foundation)1466626155
P493ICD-9 ID368.6
P6366Microsoft Academic ID2776440835
P1245OmegaWiki Defined Meaning1311300
P492OMIM ID310500
310500

P1889different fromnight blindnessQ7758678
P1995health specialtyophthalmologyQ161437
P461opposite ofnight blindnessQ7758678

Reverse relations

Q7758678night blindnessdifferent fromP1889
Q7758678night blindnessopposite ofP461

The articles in Wikimedia projects and languages

Arabic (ar / Q13955)خفشwikipedia
      Hemeralopiawikipedia
      Hemeralopíawikipedia
Basque language (eu / Q8752)Hemeralopiawikipedia
      Nyctalopiewikipedia
      Hemeralopiawikipedia
      Hemeralopiawikipedia
      Hemeralopiewikipedia
      Дневная слепотаwikipedia

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