Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 36 years-old man was admitted in September 1987. For 5 years he suffered from 4 recurrent episodes of throbbing headache, tinnitus, nausea, diplopia and divergent strabismus to which a facial palsy was recently added. In all episodes, the symptoms disappeared spontaneously and completely. A neuro-ophthalmological examination at admission disclosed an exotropia of the right eye, gaze paralysis to the left, paralysis of adduction of the left eye and preserved right eye abduction which triggered a rhythmic horizontal nystagmus. The upward and downward gazes and the convergence were well preserved. Moreover, there was a left peripheral facial palsy, and Babinski sign at the right side. Auditory evoked potentials were slowed at the mesencephalopontine transition. CT scan showed a low-density area with no contrast enhancement at the left pontine tegmentum and a left anterolateral atrophy of the pons. CSF examination showed increase in protein content and increase in the IgG content. Additional investigation included a dopplerometry of the cervical arteries, a panangiography and a bidimensional echocardiography which were normal. Diagnosis of one-and-a-half syndrome was made, possibly secondary to multiple sclerosis, and immunossuppressive therapy was initiated.
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PMID:[One-and-a-half syndrome: anatomo-clinical considerations apropos of a case]. 261 17

Most studies of intermittent exotropia deal primarily with children. However, the manifestations of this disorder in adults differ considerably from those in children. The case records of 44 adults (ages 15-70) who underwent surgery for intermittent exotropia were analyzed. These patients experienced a variety of preoperative symptoms including diplopia, headache, difficulty with reading, and ocular fatigue or pain. Cosmesis was a rare presenting complaint. The authors recommend that surgery in adults be conservative, aiming at slight undercorrection. Surgical management was successful in 41 of 44 patients. All patients with postoperative exodeviations under 15 delta had complete resolution of symptoms. Most patients with larger residual exodeviations did not improve symptomatically; patients with postoperative exodeviations tended to experience persistent diplopia.
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PMID:The surgical management of intermittent exotropia in adults. 665 91

The patient is a 72-year-old man who had tonsillitis and underwent incision on March 6, 1998. He complained headache and nausea from March 10 and double vision from March 12. He was admitted to our hospital on March 14. Neurological examination on March 18 revealed bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia with exotropia (WEBINO), bilateral ptosis and disturbance of convergence. Lumbar puncture revealed moderately elevated protein (46 mg/dl) with normal pressure and cells. The T2-weighted images of head MRI showed multiple high intensity lesions in anterior commissure and right pons. After he was treated with methylprednisolone, his headache and ptosis disappeared. The lesion in anterior commissure on MRI disappeared also. But WEBINO remained at the time of discharge. WEBINO syndrome is caused by lesion of pons and midbrain. The most common cause of bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia is multiple sclerosis in the European and American countries, but the frequency of vascular origin is higher in Japan than in the European and American countries. All the cases of WEBINO syndrome reported in Japan are vascular origin. This is the first case of WEBINO syndrome not of vascular origin.
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PMID:[A case of post-infectious wall-eyed bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia (WEBINO) syndrome]. 1042 55

Rathke cleft cysts are commonly found on autopsy but are seldom symptomatic. Conventional treatment of these lesions consists of transsphenoidal drainage with partial excision of the cyst, and recurrence is rare. Alternatively, the instillation of absolute alcohol into the cyst has been described in several reports, with no complications. The authors report on a woman with Rathke cleft cyst that recurred three times after the initial treatment; the lesion was treated with alcohol cauterization on the final recurrence with devastating complications. This 51-year-old woman presented in 1992 with headaches and visual disturbances. Admission magnetic resonance imaging revealed a sellar/suprasellar lesion that was treated with conventional surgery and was subsequently confirmed to be a Rathke cleft cyst. The patient again presented with recurrence of the cyst at 22, 26, and 31 months after the initial presentation. On the final recurrence the cyst was treated with alcohol cauterization. Postoperatively, the patient awoke blind and suffered a seizure from leakage of the alcohol. The patient remains completely blind in both eyes and is also anosmic and has left lid ptosis and exotropia, which signify damage to the first through third cranial nerves. Rathke cleft cysts have been known to recur after primary surgery; however, this is the first report of a single cyst recurring three times despite conventional surgical treatment. Additionally, this is the first report in which devastating complications from alcohol cauterization of the cyst have been described. The authors therefore advocate caution when attempting alcohol cauterization and advise that meticulous care be taken to ensure the patency of the cyst.
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PMID:Devastating complications from alcohol cauterization of recurrent Rathke cleft cyst. Case report. 1520 Jan 27

A 39-year old female was referred with a 2 year history of slowly progressive headache, exophthalmos, diplopia and restricted eye movements with exotropia of the right eye. Orthoptic examination revealed restricted elevation and mildly restricted adduction of the right eye. CT and MRI demonstrated a large (35 x 20 x 23 mm) calcified infraorbital lesion extending into the ethmoidal sinus. Because the visual field defects were progressive and the acuity OD dropped to 20/80 surgical intervention was necessary. The osteoma was successfully removed using an inferior and medial orbitotomy with swinging eyelid combined with an endoscopic approach. In a second procedure the orbital floor was reconstructed with a porous polyethylene (Medpor) implant. A final procedure consisted of a 3 mm recession of the left superior rectus muscle and infundibulotomy by the sinus surgeon to open the blocked maxillary sinus. After 6 months visual acuity OD had returned to 20/20. Orthoptic examination showed normal binocular function.
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PMID:Endoscopic and trans-fornix removal of a giant orbital-ethmoidal osteoma. 1809 73

Tolosa-Hunt syndrome (THS) is characterized by unilateral painful ophthalmoplegia with oculomotor paresis, associated with an idiopathic granulomatous inflammation involving the cavernous sinus, with a typical relapsing-remitting course. We report a case of an 8-year-old girl who was admitted because of an ophthalmoplegia with exotropia and ptosis of the left eyelid, accompanied by diplopia and left sovraorbital pain. The clinical data, neuroradiological findings and response to steroid treatment suggested THS, as defined by the 2004 International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD)-II criteria. THS must be considered a possible cause of painful ophthalmoplegia in childhood, as well as in adults, and confirmed with a focused neuroradiological investigation. The few paediatric cases described in the literature that meet the 2004 ICHD-II criteria are not sufficient to identify possible differences between the paediatric and the adult forms. Every new paediatric case should therefore be reported in order to gather and compare further information.
Cephalalgia 2009 Nov
PMID:The Tolosa-Hunt syndrome in children: a case report. 1955 37

A 31-year-old woman developed left frontal headache and retrobulbar pain with exotropia and mild limitation of upgaze without proptosis. Imaging studies disclosed a circumscribed mass measuring 1.5 cm in the greatest diameter. At surgery, the lesion was adherent to the surrounding normal orbital tissues, making for a difficult and dangerous resection. Histopathologically and immunohistochemically, the lesion was a mixed cavernous angiomatous (CD31-positive) and lymphangiomatous (D2-40-positive) tumor with abundant interstitial smooth muscle. Such lesions can present significant surgical challenges due to incomplete pseudoencapsulation.
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PMID:Complex orbital angiomyoma with features of a lymphangiohemangioma. 2323 13

A 78-year-old white woman noted progressively worsening headache, fluctuating decreased vision, dizziness, and binocular horizontal and vertical diplopia of two months duration. She had a 40 prism diopter exotropia and bilateral ophthalmoplegia. An initial temporal artery biopsy (TAB) was negative for findings of giant cell arteritis (GCA). Empiric prednisone was continued, and a second TAB was positive for GCA. In time there was complete resolution of the ophthalmoplegia.
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PMID:"My eyes are turned outside". 2435 3

A twelve-year-old African-American female presented with two week history of progressively worsening headache and fatigue, and vision difficulties for the past week. The physical examination was normal. The neurological evaluation was normal, except for cranial nerves (CN) testing, which showed bilateral restriction of adduction (CN III) and up gaze (CN IV) motions, vertical nystagmus, and left side facial paresis of central origin (CN VII). The bilateral exotropia and ophthalmoplegia are characteristics of WEBINO (Wall-Eyed Bilateral Intranuclear Ophthalmoplegia) syndrome, associated to a brain stem structural lesion. The following causes were evaluated and ruled out: tumor, infection, ischemic stroke, non-infectious inflammation. Pediatric Acquired Demyelinating Syndromes were then considered. Neuromyelitis Optica was ruled out in the absence of neuritis and normal spinal cord MRI. The differential diagnosis between Clinically Isolated Syndrome and Acute Demyelinating Encephalomyelitis, causing an isolated brain stem syndrome, is discussed.
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PMID:A 12-year-old African American girl with subacute bilateral ophthalmoplegia. 2514 58