moon blindness - traduzione in olandese
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moon blindness - traduzione in olandese

CONDITION MAKING IT DIFFICULT OR IMPOSSIBLE TO SEE IN RELATIVELY LOW LIGHT
Night-blindness; Night blindness; Night Blindness; Moon blink; Moonblink; Night blind; Nightblindness; Nightblind; Cyntolopia; Nyctalopic
  • 260px

moon blindness         
  • Advanced stage of disease
  • Advanced stage of disease
  • ERU on an [[Icelandic horse]]
EYE DISEASE OF HORSES
Moon blindness; Equine Recurrent Uveitis
n. gezichtsverlies bij paarden met regelmatige tussenpozen voortkomend; intervallen; nachtblindheid, nyctalopia, buitengewoon slechte visie in duisternis; nachtblindheid, stoornis die visie in de nacht vermindert of verslechtert
night blindness         
nachtblindheid
colour blind         
  • Simulation of the normal (above) and dichromatic (below) perception of red and green apples
  • Three sequential colormaps that have been designed to be accessible to the color blind.
  • Confusion Lines for the three types of Dichromacy superimposed on CIEXYZ color space.
  • date=March 2023}}
  • Horizontal traffic light in [[Halifax, Nova Scotia]], Canada
  • fovea]] of an individual with normal color vision (left), and a color blind (protanopic) retina. The center of the fovea holds very few blue-sensitive cones.
  • Colors of [[Boardgame]] pieces must be carefully chosen to be colorblind-accessible
  • Punnett squares for each combination of parents' color vision status giving probabilities of their offsprings' status; A superscript 'c' denotes a chromosome with an affected gene
  • Testing the colors of a web chart, ''(center)'', to ensure that no information is lost to the various forms of color blindness.
  • The lack of standard positional clues makes this light difficult to interpret.
  • The infamous inverted traffic light in Syracuse, NY
  • An 1895 illustration of normal vision and various kinds of color blindness.
INABILITY OR DECREASED ABILITY TO SEE COLOUR, OR PERCEIVE COLOUR DIFFERENCES, UNDER NORMAL LIGHTING CONDITIONS
Colour-blindness; Color blind; Color-blind; Colour-blind; Colour blind; Colour blindness; Colorblindness; Color-blindness; Colourblind; Colourblindness; Color Blind; Protanopia; Deuteranopia; Colour Vision Deficiency; Protanope; Tritanopia; Colour-Blindness; Deuteranope; Tritanope; Colour Blindness; Color vision deficiency; Anomalous trichromacy; Colour vision deficiencies; Red-green colorblindness; Loss of color vision; Red-green color blindness; Color vision defects; Protanomaly; Deuteranomaly; Color vision deficiencies; Tritanomaly; Colour Blind; Daltonian; Dyschromatopsia; Acritochromacy; Colour vision deficiency; Color Blindness; Blue-yellow color blindness; Red-green colour blindness; Red green colour blindness; Colour visual impairment; Colorblind; Red-Green color blindness; Daltonist; Red–green colorblindness; Red green colourblind; Red-green colorblind; Red–green color blindness; Red/green color blindness; Tritanoptic; Tritanopic; Dyschromotopsia; Color impaired; Achloropsia; Red/green colorblind; Color anomaly; Color deficiency; Red-green color blind; Red/green colour blindness; Red–green color blind; Red-green colourblind; Red-green colourblindness; Color-corrective glasses; Deutanopia
adj. kan kleuren niet duidelijk zien, niet in staat een of meer veelgekleurde kleuren te onderscheiden

Definizione

Nyctalopia
·noun ·see Moonblink.
II. Nyctalopia ·noun A disease of the eye, in consequence of which the patient can see well in a faint light or at twilight, but is unable to see during the day or in a strong light; day blindness.

Wikipedia

Nyctalopia

Nyctalopia (; 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.