Disease | cone rod dystrophy |
Symptom | C0456909|blindness |
Sentences | 9 |
PubMedID- 25957687 | Because the secondary loss of cones in retinitis pigmentosa (rp) leads to blindness, the administration of rdcvf is a promising therapy for this untreatable neurodegenerative disease. |
PubMedID- 21496228 | This causes retinitis pigmentosa, which eventually leads to blindness in the affected individual . |
PubMedID- 25915832 | Retinal degenerative diseases such as age-related macular degeneration and retinitis pigmentosa lead to blindness due to gradual loss of photoreceptors, while the inner retinal neurons survive to a large extent1,2, albeit with some rewiring3,4. |
PubMedID- 21920492 | Autofluorescence imaging and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography in incomplete congenital stationary night blindness and comparison with retinitis pigmentosa. |
PubMedID- 20142850 | The retinitis pigmentosa (rp) debuted with night blindness at the age of 15 with a decreased visual acuity at the age of 20. |
PubMedID- 25885848 | Two english ophthalmologists, laurence and moon reported four cases of retinitis pigmentosa with marked night blindness and body changes of dwarfism, hypogenitalism and mental deficiency in 1866. |
PubMedID- 24702847 | The most common hereditary retinal degeneration, retinitis pigmentosa (rp), leads to blindness by degeneration of cone photoreceptors. |
PubMedID- 20826782 | Both cadherins are defective in usher syndrome type i (sensorineural deafness and blindness due to retinitis pigmentosa). |
PubMedID- 24312285 | Some hereditary diseases, such as retinitis pigmentosa, lead to blindness due to the death of photoreceptors, though the rest of the visual system might be only slightly affected. |
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