Mitchell Brigell
Loyola University Chicago
28 Papers
307 Citations
Mitchell Brigell is an academic researcher from Loyola University Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Evoked potential & Optic neuritis. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 28 publications.
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Papers
Guidelines for calibration of stimulus and recording parameters used in clinical electrophysiology of vision. Calibration Standard Committee of the International Society for Clinical Electrophysiology of Vision (ISCEV)
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present guidelines for proper calibration of stimulus and recording equipment for clinical electrophysiological testing, which are more generally applicable to studies which are dependent upon accurate measurement of luminance or electrical signals.
The effects of age on steady-state pattern electroretinograms and visual evoked potentials.
TL;DR: The results suggest that aging influences both retinal and central visual pathways, and Aging differentially affected the visual evoked potential second and fourth harmonic responses, suggesting different neuronal origins for these components.
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Optic neuritis A prospective study
Gastone G. Celesia,David I. Kaufman,Mitchell Brigell,Sandra Cone Toleikis,D. Kokinakis,R. Lorance,B. Lizano +6 more
TL;DR: Recovery in the majority of patients was rapid and complete within the first 2 months and in some patients, improvement continued over 6 months, and the initial classification on the GVIS was significantly correlated with the final outcome.
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Effects of stimulus location and pattern upon the visually evoked cortical potential and the electroretinogram.
TL;DR: The pattern properties of the visually evoked potential and the electroretinogram have been investigated for phase alternated patterns of checks presented to the near periphery of the retina and the results may reflect some of the dynamic properties of visual fields.
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Hypometric saccades and low‐gain pursuit resulting from a thalamic hemorrhage
TL;DR: It is postulate that the ocular abnormalities observed in patients with a right thalamic hemorrhage were secondary to an interruption of the efferent pathways from the right cerebral areas mediating saccadic and smoothpursuit eye movements.
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