hemianopsia
Hemianopsia is a defect of vision in which half of the visual field is lost. The most common form is homonymous hemianopsia, where the same half of the field is missing in both eyes, typically due to a lesion in the retrochiasmal visual pathways located behind the optic chiasm (in the optic radiations or the occipital cortex). Less common are heteronymous defects, such as bitemporal hemianopsia caused by chiasmal compression, where the outer (temporal) halves are lost in both eyes.
Causes are primarily neurological and include stroke or other lesions in the posterior cerebral artery territory,
Symptoms commonly involve reduced or missing vision in the affected half of the visual field, which may
Diagnosis relies on visual field testing, such as automated perimetry, along with imaging studies (MRI or CT)