pupillary$65539$ - traducción al holandés
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pupillary$65539$ - traducción al holandés

Pupillary athetosis; Pupillary hippus; Pathological hippus; Pathologic hippus; Physiologic hippus; Physiological hippus; Pathological pupillary hippus; Pathologic pupillary hippus; Physiologic pupillary hippus; Physiological pupillary hippus

pupillary      
adj. van pupil van het oog, pupil-; van de pupil, leerling
light reflex         
REFLEX ASSOCIATED WITH THE PUPIL
Pupil constriction; Consensual pupillary reflex; Direct pupillary reflex; Consensual reflex; Direct reflex; Reflex, pupillary; Light reflex; Pupillary accommodation reflex
lichtreflex (eigenschap van lichtstraling teruggekaatst te worden van het voorwerpt waar het opvalt))

Definición

pupil
(pupils)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
The pupils of a school are the children who go to it.
Over a third of those now at secondary school in Wales attend schools with over 1,000 pupils...
N-COUNT
2.
A pupil of a painter, musician, or other expert is someone who studies under that expert and learns his or her skills.
After his education, Goldschmidt became a pupil of the composer Franz Schreker.
N-COUNT: with poss
3.
The pupils of your eyes are the small, round, black holes in the centre of them.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Hippus

Pupillary hippus, also known as pupillary athetosis, is spasmodic, rhythmic, but regular dilating and contracting pupillary movements between the sphincter and dilator muscles. Pupillary hippus comes from the Greek hippos meaning horse, perhaps due to the rhythm of the contractions representing a galloping horse.

It is particularly noticeable when pupil function is tested with a light, but is independent of eye movements or changes in illumination. It is usually normal, however pathological hippus can occur.

Pathologic hippus, the phenomenon of increased oscillation or their amplitude, is associated with aconite poisoning, altered mental status, trauma, cirrhosis, and renal disease; suggesting a common pathway of frontal lobe dysfunction. A retrospective study of 117 hospitalized patients with hippus noted an increased 30-day mortality when compared to controls and adjusted for other factors.