F
Fred C. Chu
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 31
Citations - 2595
Fred C. Chu is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nystagmus & Eye movement. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 31 publications receiving 2527 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Implantation of magnetic search coils for measurement of eye position: an improved method.
Journal ArticleDOI
The gel state of the vitreous and ascorbate-dependent oxygen consumption: relationship to the etiology of nuclear cataracts.
Ying-Bo Shui,Nancy M. Holekamp,Benjamin C. Kramer,Jan R. Crowley,Mark A. Wilkins,Fred C. Chu,Paula E. Malone,Shayna J. Mangers,Joshua H. Hou,Carla J. Siegfried,David C. Beebe +10 more
TL;DR: In patients undergoing retinal surgery, liquefaction of the vitreous and previous vitrectomy were associated with decreased ascorbate concentration and lower oxygen consumption, and determining how the eye is protected from nuclear cataracts should suggest treatments to reduce their incidence.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ocular Motor Signs in Some Metabolic Diseases
TL;DR: Ocular motor disturbances are described with a miscellany of metabolic disturbances and what is generally considered a variant of Niemann-Pick disease, or sea-blue histiocytosis, but which the authors prefer to call the "DAF" syndrome.
Journal ArticleDOI
Acquired nystagmus in early childhood: a presenting sign of intracranial tumor.
TL;DR: Three associated clinical findings were present or developed in these patients to distinguish this entity from spasmus nutans : optic atrophy in all ten patients, poor feeding due to diencephalic syndrome, and increased intracranial pressure with hydrocephalus in 3 of 10.
Journal ArticleDOI
The familial occurrence of cutaneous melanoma, intraocular melanoma, and the dysplastic nevus syndrome.
Mark H. Greene,Reginald J. Sanders,Fred C. Chu,Wallace H. Clark,David E. Elder,David G. Cogan +5 more
TL;DR: The association of intraocular melanoma with cutaneous melanoma and dysplastic nevus syndrome may be coincidental, and the ophthalmologic examinations disclosed neither intraocular pigment cell malignancies nor suspicious or atypical choroidal nevi.