NANOS Annual Meeting Collection

Select Section

Overview

NOTE: explore the  2024 Annual Meeting here.

The NANOS Annual Meeting Collection is an archive that contains the posters, presentations, and other works from the annual meeting of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society (NANOS), a professional organization of more than 600 members who are fully trained ophthalmologists or neurologists. Contains records from the first meeting in 1975 to the present.

Since 1992, the NANOS Annual Meeting has also included annual meetings with presentations organized by the Frank B. Walsh Society (see our Frank B. Walsh Society Collection), which began meeting in 1969 at The Johns Hopkins University’s Wilmer Eye Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.

NANOS Annual Meeting #6, 1980
La Fonda, Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States of America
02-20-1980 through 02-22-1980
Meeting statistics: 3 days; 3 programs; 18 presentations; 8 active participants (0 moderators; 7 presenters; 8 authors)

Wednesday, February 20, 1980 (02-20-1980)

Program: Various Subjects Symposium (Session 1)
Moderators: not available

Presentation 1: Common Optic Nerve Disease
Presenters: Joel S. Glaser
Authors: Joel S. Glaser

Presentation 2: Ocular Fundus-Chiasmal Syndromes - not available for Web publication
Presenters: William F. Hoyt
Authors: William F. Hoyt

Presentation 3: Diagnostic Evaluation - Pituitary Adenoma
Presenters: Thomas J. Carlow
Authors: Thomas J. Carlow

Presentation 4: Pupil
Presenters: Robert B. Daroff
Authors: Robert B. Daroff

Presentation 5: The Pupil in Clinical Diagnosis
Presenters: H. Stanley Thompson
Authors: Thomas J. Zweifel; H. Stanley Thompson

Presentation 6: Visual Hallucinations
Presenters: Norman J. Schatz
Authors: Norman J. Schatz

Presentation 7: Examination of Optic Nerve Function
Presenters: Thomas J. Carlow
Authors: Thomas J. Carlow

Thursday, February 21, 1980 (02-21-1980)

Program: Various Subjects Symposium (Session 2)
Moderators: not available

Presentation 1: The Visual Fields
Presenters: Joel S. Glaser
Authors: Joel S. Glaser

Presentation 3: Visual Electrophysiology in Neuro-Ophthalmology
Presenters: Thomas J. Carlow
Authors: Thomas J. Carlow

Presentation 4: Myasthenia Gravis
Presenters: Norman J. Schatz
Authors: Norman J. Schatz

Presentation 5: Acute Paralytic Disorders with Eye Signs
Presenters: Joseph M. Bicknell
Authors: Joseph M. Bicknell

Presentation 6: Non-Proptotic Orbital Disease - not available for Web publication
Presenters: William F. Hoyt
Authors: William F. Hoyt

Friday, February 22, 1980 (02-22-1980)

Program: Various Subjects Symposium (Session 3)
Moderators: not available

Presentation 1: Cerebellar Eye Signs
Presenters: Robert B. Daroff
Authors: Robert B. Daroff

Presentation 2: Nystagmus
Presenters: Robert B. Daroff
Authors: Robert B. Daroff

Presentation 3: Posterior Fossa Syndromes
Presenters: Joseph M. Bicknell
Authors: Joseph M. Bicknell

Presentation 4: The Treatment of Thyroid Ophthalmopathy
Presenters: Norman J. Schatz
Authors: Norman J. Schatz

Presentation 5: Anterior Quadrant Head Pain
Presenters: Joseph M. Bicknell
Authors: Joseph M. Bicknell

Presentation 6: Progressive External Ophthalmoplegia
Presenters: Robert B. Daroff
Authors: Robert B. Daroff

History

The NANOS (North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society) Annual Meeting was originally named the “Annual Rocky Mountain Neuro-Ophthalmology Course”, until the incorporation of NANOS and its first meeting in February, 1980.

Since 1992, the NANOS Annual Meeting has also included annual meetings with presentations organized by the Frank B. Walsh Society, which began meeting in 1969 at The Johns Hopkins University’s Wilmer Eye Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.

North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society (NANOS)

The North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society (NANOS) is a professional organization of about 700 members who are fully trained ophthalmologists or neurologists. It seeks to promote the field of neuro-ophthalmology by supporting all forms of education, encouraging research, fostering clinical expertise and maintaining cordial exchanges.