What's the difference between hypermetric and hypermetrical?
Hypermetric
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) These saccades were hypermetric and were followed immediately, without any intersaccadic interval, by a large, oppositely directed saccade (dynamic overshoot).
(2) Photoelectric eye movement recording in 9 patients with cerebellar disorders defined three features of saccadic overshoot dysmetria: (i) saccades were hypermetric and successively diminished in amplitude; (ii) saccadic initiation interval averaged 173 ms: and (iii) eye position was constant during the intersaccadic period.
(3) to the lesion side) tended to be hypermetric and saccades made in response to a contralateral target step were strongly hypometric.
(4) For diagnosis of myasthenic eye muscle palsies electrooculography has a special significance especially in connection with the application of Edrophonium, which normalizes myasthenic hypometric saccades and transforms them even in hypermetric saccades.
(5) during the cover test, the keeping of fixation exhibits sometimes an hypermetric movement of the eye, which is accounted with a false localization of images.
(6) After Tensilon injection hypermetric saccades (overshoots) were observed which depended on a disproportion of the supranuclear oculomotor centers and the eye muscles.
(7) Our patients also presented the classical hypermetric misreaching when attempting to point by hand at visual targets in an otherwise dark room.
(8) Movements with oscillations reached the target with increased variability of end position, whereas movements without oscillations were often hypermetric.
(9) Lesions of the lateral cerebellum, on the contrary, were followed by inability to control accurately the amplitude of steps which were performed with a constant hypermetric error; the maintenance phase of movement was not disturbed in this group.
(10) Direct current electro-oculography revealed abduction nystagmus with hypermetric abduction saccades in 35 of 64 patients with unilateral and 55 of 66 patients with bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia.
(11) A captive adult puma developed ataxia, a hypermetric gait and whole body tremor.
(12) Superposition of impaired medial rectus inhibition and increased phasic innervation best explains abduction nystagmus with slowed hypermetric (6 unilateral and 23 bilateral cases) or normometric abduction saccades (9 unilateral and 5 bilateral cases).
(13) In some myasthenic patients, small amplitude saccades were hypermetric and had high velocities, appearing clinically as "quiver" movements characteristic of MG.
(14) Over-shooting oscillations or slightly hypermetric voluntary saccades occurred in 5 patients.
(15) Two dogs that had been given phenytoin for control of seizures for approximately 1 year developed signs of phenytoin toxicosis (postural ataxia an d a hypermetric gait) when chloramphenicol was added to the therapeutic regimen.
(16) Additional arguments for damage of cerebellar oculomotor functions are the predominance of cogwheeled smooth pursuit and the occasional observation of hypermetric saccades, both toward the side of the tumor.
(17) The adjustment of the amplitude of artificially induced hypermetric saccades, called gain adaptivity, was examined experimentally by using double target steps.
(18) Abduction nystagmus with hypermetric abduction saccades of normal velocity is explained by an increased phasic innervation adjusted to adduction paresis.
(19) Precision changes during plantar flexion movements were usually excessive, hypermetric and almost twice longer than preimmersion.
(20) Clinical examination of saccades revealed about half of the dissociated and half of the conjugate hypermetric disorders.
Hypermetrical
Definition:
(a.) Having a redundant syllable; exceeding the common measure.
Example Sentences:
(1) These saccades were hypermetric and were followed immediately, without any intersaccadic interval, by a large, oppositely directed saccade (dynamic overshoot).
(2) Photoelectric eye movement recording in 9 patients with cerebellar disorders defined three features of saccadic overshoot dysmetria: (i) saccades were hypermetric and successively diminished in amplitude; (ii) saccadic initiation interval averaged 173 ms: and (iii) eye position was constant during the intersaccadic period.
(3) to the lesion side) tended to be hypermetric and saccades made in response to a contralateral target step were strongly hypometric.
(4) For diagnosis of myasthenic eye muscle palsies electrooculography has a special significance especially in connection with the application of Edrophonium, which normalizes myasthenic hypometric saccades and transforms them even in hypermetric saccades.
(5) during the cover test, the keeping of fixation exhibits sometimes an hypermetric movement of the eye, which is accounted with a false localization of images.
(6) After Tensilon injection hypermetric saccades (overshoots) were observed which depended on a disproportion of the supranuclear oculomotor centers and the eye muscles.
(7) Our patients also presented the classical hypermetric misreaching when attempting to point by hand at visual targets in an otherwise dark room.
(8) Movements with oscillations reached the target with increased variability of end position, whereas movements without oscillations were often hypermetric.
(9) Lesions of the lateral cerebellum, on the contrary, were followed by inability to control accurately the amplitude of steps which were performed with a constant hypermetric error; the maintenance phase of movement was not disturbed in this group.
(10) Direct current electro-oculography revealed abduction nystagmus with hypermetric abduction saccades in 35 of 64 patients with unilateral and 55 of 66 patients with bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia.
(11) A captive adult puma developed ataxia, a hypermetric gait and whole body tremor.
(12) Superposition of impaired medial rectus inhibition and increased phasic innervation best explains abduction nystagmus with slowed hypermetric (6 unilateral and 23 bilateral cases) or normometric abduction saccades (9 unilateral and 5 bilateral cases).
(13) In some myasthenic patients, small amplitude saccades were hypermetric and had high velocities, appearing clinically as "quiver" movements characteristic of MG.
(14) Over-shooting oscillations or slightly hypermetric voluntary saccades occurred in 5 patients.
(15) Two dogs that had been given phenytoin for control of seizures for approximately 1 year developed signs of phenytoin toxicosis (postural ataxia an d a hypermetric gait) when chloramphenicol was added to the therapeutic regimen.
(16) Additional arguments for damage of cerebellar oculomotor functions are the predominance of cogwheeled smooth pursuit and the occasional observation of hypermetric saccades, both toward the side of the tumor.
(17) The adjustment of the amplitude of artificially induced hypermetric saccades, called gain adaptivity, was examined experimentally by using double target steps.
(18) Abduction nystagmus with hypermetric abduction saccades of normal velocity is explained by an increased phasic innervation adjusted to adduction paresis.
(19) Precision changes during plantar flexion movements were usually excessive, hypermetric and almost twice longer than preimmersion.
(20) Clinical examination of saccades revealed about half of the dissociated and half of the conjugate hypermetric disorders.