Two teenagers (ages 18 and 19) experienced intermittent episodes of reversal of vision over a period exceeding one year. The transient visual illusion was described as a 180-degree rotation of visual image in the coronal plane. The episodes were followed by moderate or severe throbbing migraine headaches. One patient also reported occasional micropsia during the same attack. "Reversal of vision episodes were brief, lasting less than five minutes, but their first and abrupt appearance was frightening for both of the patients," reported Puiu Nisipeanu, MD, PhD, of the Hillel Yaffe Medical Center, Hadera, Israel.
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Two teenagers (ages 18 and 19) experienced intermittent episodes of reversal of vision over a period exceeding one year. The transient visual illusion was described as a 180-degree rotation of visual image in the coronal plane. The episodes were followed by moderate or severe throbbing migraine headaches. One patient also reported occasional micropsia during the same attack. "Reversal of vision episodes were brief, lasting less than five minutes, but their first and abrupt appearance was frightening for both of the patients," reported Puiu Nisipeanu, MD, PhD, of the Hillel Yaffe Medical Center, Hadera, Israel.
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