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Show Annual Meeting of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society, Puerto Rico, March 1-6, 2014 The North American Neuro-ophthalmology Society (NANOS) held its 40th annual meeting at the Wynd-ham Rio Mar Beach Resort, Rio Grande, PR. Besides unre-lenting sunshine and ocean surf, we had scintillating discussions about cutting edge research and relevant clinical challenges. This year, we had a special symposium which began on Saturday March 1. "When Neurosurgery and Neuro- Ophthalmology Collide" organized by Karl Golnik and Neil Miller. The 4 sessions covered issues of comanage-ment, baseline testing before surgery, complications, and what the neuro-ophthalmologist can do to prevent or assist in neurosurgical adventures. The Frank Walsh Session was chaired by Prem Sub-ramanian from Johns Hopkins University. The Hopkins team included Ari Blitz, neuroradiologist, and Charles Eberhart, neuopathologist. The expert panel of Sophia Chung, Deborah Friedman, and Steven Newman provided commentary. At the end of the morning and afternoon sessions, key points were reviewed. The best Walsh paper was for "Muscle Bound or Unbound," by Dane Breker et al (Ann Arbor, MI). Meeting symposia included: 1) "Journal Club" featuring updates on transient ischemic attacks and stroke prevention, myasthenia gravis, traumatic brain injury, and treatment of nystagmus. 2) "Hot Topics: Zebra taming": paraneoplastic syndromes, toxic and nutritional optic neuropathies, heredi-tary optic neuropathies, and IgG 4 disease. The Neuro- Ophthalmology Research Disease Investigator Consortium (NORDIC) group covered the initial baseline findings of the Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension Treatment Trial. Lively discussions about "Eye Pain in the Quiet Eye" and "Non-organic Neuro-ophthalmology" kept NANOS mem-bers in their seats until the meeting closed. We had outstanding optional symposia including: "Visual Electrophysiology in Neuro-ophthalmology" by Greg Van Stavern, "Hands-on Ophthalmic and Neurologic Examination Techniques for Neuro-Ophthalmologists," by Mitchell Strominger, "Observational Clinical Research Studies," lead by Deborah Friedman and Beau Bruce, and "Smartphones and Gadgets" by Joyce Liao. The scientific platform and poster sessions were well attended. There were 245 poster presentations, a record for a NANOS meeting. The newly named James Sharpe Best Abstract Award went to Krista Kinard (University of Utah) for "Chronic migraine is associated with reduced corneal nerve fiber density and length." The resident awardee was Ajay E. Kariyan, (University of Miami) for "Orbital fibroblasts from thyroid eye disease patients differ in proliferative and adipogenic responses depending on disease sub-type." The medical student awardee, MatthewMiller (University of Utah) presented "A com-parison of clinical features of pseudotumor cerebri secondary to tetracyclines and idiopathic intracranial hypertension." The 2014 Thomas and Susan Carlow Young Investigator Award was presented to Patrick Yu-Wai-Man (Newcastle, United Kingdom) for his research on Hereditary Optic Neuropathies and for his presentation: "The molecular and Neuro-ophthalmological features of autosomal recessive spas-tic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay." FIG. 1. Anthony Arnold, MD receives the Distinguished Service Award from North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society. e10 Digre: J Neuro-Ophthalmol 2014; 34: e10-e11 Neuro-Ophthalmology News Section Editor: Kathleen B. Digre, MD Copyright © North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited. Beau Bruce (Emory University) received the NANOS Pilot Grant Award for "Non-mydriatic ocular fundus pho-tography for the acute risk stratification of patients with transient ischemic attack and minor stroke." Linus Da-Shih Sun (New York, NY) won the NANOS-Fight for Sight joint award for "Quantitative eye move-ments to evaluate corollary discharge." The 2014 Jacobson Lecture delivered by Len Levin (Montreal, Quebec) was a tour de force multimedia mystery story-"Seeking Sense in Cecocentral Scotomas: three ques-tions and four answers." The 2014 Tom Carlow Distinguished Service Award, NANOS's highest honor, was bestowed on Anthony (Tony) Arnold from University of California, Los Angeles (Fig. 1). There was a record of 564 registrants for the NANOS meeting representing 34 countries (excluding the United States). There were spectacular social events as well. Tours of Old San Juan, the El Yunque rainforest, and a biolumines-cent mangrove channels kayak event were really interesting and well attended. Janel Fick and her outstanding staff hosted the very well-organized meeting. See you in San Diego, California in 2015! Kathleen B. Digre, MD Department of Ophthalmology and Neurology, Moran Eye Center, The University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah Digre: J Neuro-Ophthalmol 2014; 34: e10-e11 e11 Neuro-Ophthalmology News Copyright © North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited. |