Déviation conjuguée

Déviation conjuguée, also termed conjugate eye deviation (CED) or ipsilesional gaze shift, is a medical sign indicating brain damage (e.g. a stroke in the middle cerebral artery[1]), wherein the pupils of the eye tend to move toward the side of the body where the lesion is located. The symptom was described by Swiss neurologist Jean-Louis Prévost in 1868.

Déviation conjuguée
Differential diagnosisStroke (in the middle cerebral artery)


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 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
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