So, so disturbing. Many of those people are having an unusual and identical symptom. They look up suddenly and then turn their heads as though looking at something astonishing above their heads that is flying in circles above and around them. They raise the same arm up as the direction their heads turn.
They appear to see something terrifying that then causes them to collapse. I wondered, What kind of physical body event could cause this?
I FOUND THIS:
Deviation of eyes and head in acute cerebral stroke
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1543655/
and
https://radiopaedia.org/articles/prevost-sign-eyes?lang=us
The Prévost sign, also known as the Vulpian sign, refers to conjugate ocular deviation in patients with acute cortical hemiparetic stroke.
The direction is variable, depending on the location of the stroke.
In a hemispheric stroke, the eyes usually deviate towards the lesion (away from the hemiparesis). The degree of deviation may be exaggerated when the head is turned in the same direction. It is most pronounced with non-dominant hemisphere (thus right) lesions 2-3.
Involvement of the thalamus, on the other hand, usually results in conjugate gaze deviation away from the lesion and thus towards the side of hemiparesis 3.
This information needs to be spread far and wide so people can be aware of what this is. Hopefully the November film will go viral!
So, so disturbing. Many of those people are having an unusual and identical symptom. They look up suddenly and then turn their heads as though looking at something astonishing above their heads that is flying in circles above and around them. They raise the same arm up as the direction their heads turn.
They appear to see something terrifying that then causes them to collapse. I wondered, What kind of physical body event could cause this?
I FOUND THIS:
Deviation of eyes and head in acute cerebral stroke
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1543655/
and
https://radiopaedia.org/articles/prevost-sign-eyes?lang=us
The Prévost sign, also known as the Vulpian sign, refers to conjugate ocular deviation in patients with acute cortical hemiparetic stroke.
The direction is variable, depending on the location of the stroke.
In a hemispheric stroke, the eyes usually deviate towards the lesion (away from the hemiparesis). The degree of deviation may be exaggerated when the head is turned in the same direction. It is most pronounced with non-dominant hemisphere (thus right) lesions 2-3.
Involvement of the thalamus, on the other hand, usually results in conjugate gaze deviation away from the lesion and thus towards the side of hemiparesis 3.
This information needs to be spread far and wide so people can be aware of what this is. Hopefully the November film will go viral.