- mirror agnosia [DOID:0060144]
An agnosia that is a loss of the ability to acknowledge objects in the neglected field that are visible when a mirror reflects the object visible in the non-neglected field.
- ocular hypertension [DOID:9282]
An eye disease that is characterized by elevated intraocular pressure in the absence of optic nerve damage or visual field loss.
- open-angle glaucoma [DOID:1067]
A glaucoma characterized by optic nerve damage resulting in progressive loss of visual field and increased pressure in the eye due to trabecular blockage.
- simultanagnosia [DOID:0060148]
An agnosia that is a loss of the ability to recognize a whole image or scene while retianing the ability to recognize objects or details in their visual field one at a time.
- retinitis pigmentosa 86 [DOID:0112143]
A retinitis pigmentosa characterized by night blindness followed by progressive narrowing of visual fields and decline in visual acuity that has_material_basis_in mutation in the KIAA1549 gene on chromosome 7q34.
- chiasmal syndrome [DOID:5655]
An optic nerve disease that is characterized by lesions of the optic chiasm, manifesting as various impairments of the sufferer's visual field according to the location of the lesion along the optic nerve.
- age related macular degeneration [DOID:10871]
A degeneration of macula and posterior pole that is characterized by a loss of vision in the center of the visual field (the macula) resulting from damage to the retina and resulting in blurring of the sharp central vision.
- retinitis pigmentosa 88 [DOID:0112145]
A retinitis pigmentosa characterized by night blindness and constriction of peripheral visual fields, with mildly reduced visual acuity that has_material_basis_in homozygous or compound heterozygous mutation in the RP1L1 gene on chromosome 8p23.1.
- steroid-induced glaucoma [DOID:9946]
A glaucoma characterized by elevated intraocular pressure secondary to chronic corticosteroid use, which leads to glaucomatous optic nerve atrophy and progressive vision loss and has_symptom progressive decreased vision, visual field defects, and decreased peripheral vision. Steroid-induced glaucoma is caused by chronic corticosteroid use.