Have you considered searching these resources? - Orphanet or other rare disease databases - Scopus - Embase - TRIP database Carolyn Biglow On Wednesday, December 30, 2020, Harman, Susan E. <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > I have another one of those search requests that probably doesn't have a > really good answer. > > One of our medical students was given the following article: Kim N. Anton > syndrome as a result of MS exacerbation. Neurol Clin Pract 2017 > Apr;7(2):e19-e22. > > Anton(s) syndrome or visual anosognosia (lack of awareness and denial of > blindness) is apparently very rare. According to the articles "only 28 > cases have been published between 1965 and 2016." I'm assuming the author > found this information by doing a literature search when she was writing up > her case report. > > You guessed it, the student's attending wants to know if there have been > other case reports since this article and, if so, how many. Most of the > general articles I've found on Anton syndrome since 2017 repeat this same > statement about 28 cases. The article itself only has a few related > articles, mainly letters commenting on it. When I try 'find similar' in > Ovid the search goes off into the MS aspect. Interestingly, the similar > function in PubMed (which I'm not as familiar with) returns more citations, > but they don't seem particularly relevant either. Anton syndrome is > similar to Anton-Babinski syndrome and cortical blindness, but apparently > not quite the same. > > I did a Medline search with the textwords and limited to Case Reports and > the last 5 years. This gave me 28 articles. I did a few other more > general searches in Medline and CINAHL. UpToDate and several Google > searches didn't help much. The ophthalmology textbooks we have in print > and online aren't that helpful. I could go back and search visual > anosognosia to see if that brings up any different articles. > > It seems to me the most fruitful tactic would be to take citations found > by searching anton$ and case reports and just look through them. That > would be a pain, but I'm not sure what else to suggest. I could try > emailing the author of the original article, but I'm not sure how much of a > response I'd get. > > I'm still the in holiday doldrums, so if any of you have suggestions on a > better way to look for this information, please let me know. > > Thanks. > > > Susan E. Harman, MSLS > Medical Staff Library > University of Maryland Medical Center Midtown Campus > 827 Linden St. > Baltimore, Md. 21201 > 410-225-8383 > Fax 410-225-8119 > [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]> > > > > > This e-mail and any accompanying attachments may be privileged, > confidential, contain protected health information about an identified > patient or be otherwise protected from disclosure. State and federal law > protect the confidentiality of this information. If the reader of this > message is not the intended recipient; you are prohibited from using, > disclosing, reproducing or distributing this information; you should > immediately notify the sender by telephone or e-mail and delete this e-mail. >