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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Diagnosis of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome was made in a 25-year-old woman on the basis of unilateral third and sixth nerve paresis and possible involvement of the first branch of the ipsilateral trigeminal nerve, accompanied by headaches and ocular pain, which responded promptly to corticosteroid administration. Irregular narrowing of the right carotid siphon and occlusion of the homolateral superior ophthalmic vein were observed. During steroid therapy this stenosis improved in association with almost complete clinical recovery, although the vein was not recanalized. Of ten reported cases with contrast radiographic abnormalities, including our own, only two showed pupillary involvement. We hypothesize that the third nerve paresis with pupillary sparing in this syndrome may be attributable to the same underlying mechanism as that of diabetic ophthalmoplegia.
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PMID:Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Arteriographic evidence of improvement in carotid narrowing. 63 55

We studied six patients with SUNCT, a unilateral headache syndrome with shortlasting attacks and ipsilateral autonomic phenomena with orbital phlebography and MRI. All but one orbital phlebogram showed abnormalities on the headache side (in one patient bilaterally), involving the superior ophthalmic vein or/and the cavernous sinus. No systematic changes were demonstrated on MRI. The phlebography findings were similar to those observed in the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and in cluster headache.
Cephalalgia 1992 Dec
PMID:Shortlasting, unilateral, neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing (SUNCT syndrome): V. Orbital phlebography. 147 43

Twenty consecutive patients with recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome were studied. One had a parent who suffered from recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Thirty-three percent of the patients had also recurrent periods of weeks to months of unilateral periorbital pain without ophthalmoplegia. One patient had cluster headache before the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome started. Some patients had involvement of cranial nerves outside the cavernous sinus region during Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and also between episodes. The same systemic symptoms, i.e. back pain, cold feet, arthralgia, gut problems, varices, vertigo, chronic fatigue, thrombophlebitis, memory deficiency and signs of inflammation in serum, occurred in Tolosa-Hunt syndrome as earlier found in patients with orbital venous vasculitis. Seventy-three percent of the patients had pathologic orbital phlebograms. All patients treated with steroids reacted promptly; four who developed chronic pain syndromes were treated satisfactorily with azathioprine.
Cephalalgia 1992 Feb
PMID:Recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 155 57

Two unusual cases of vascular headache, one caused by jugular venous compression from a goiter and one triggered by flushing associated with a CGRP-producing renal tumour, are reported. Their histories are compared with those experiencing other headaches of vascular origin. Two patients with a primary neural irritative lesion, one with a sphenoid sinus carcinoma and one with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome, presented with headaches resembling migraine. These case-histories are used to illustrate the interaction of nervous system and vascular system in the production of headache which has implications for the pathophysiology of migraine and cluster headache.
Headache 1991 Jul
PMID:Solved and unsolved headache problems. 177 58

A case of fungal aneurysm associated with presumed Tolosa-Hunt syndrome is reported. A 57-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with complaints of left blepharoptosis, headache and weight loss. Neurological examination revealed left ophthalmoplegia without facial hypesthesia. Visual acuity was normal. Laboratory studies showed raised ESR, 4+ glycosuria, and a blood sugar of 351mg/dl. Computerized tomography (CT) scan and left carotid angiography were considered normal. Left orbital venography showed no filling of the left cavernous sinus. Diabetic ophthalmoplegia was suspected by a neurologist. The patient was treated with insulin therapy, but visual acuity worsened, and hypesthesia was noted in the first and second divisions of the left trigeminal nerve. Subsequent CT scan demonstrated a high density lesion, which was homogeneously enhanced, in the left cavernous portion and the superior orbital fissure. The patient was presumed of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome, and prednine therapy (30mg/day) was started. On the second day after the administration of prednine, hypesthesia of the first and second division of the left trigeminal nerve improved. After 9 days of prednine therapy, the patient suddenly complained of severe headache, and lapsed into a coma. Massive hemorrhage with subarachnoid hemorrhage was recognized on the CT scan, with a marked midline shift to the right. The hematoma was immediately removed. A ruptured cerebral aneurysm was found at the bottom of the hematoma. The aneurysm was located in the distal portion of the left middle cerebral artery. Aneurysm clipping with external decompression and bilateral ventricular drainage was performed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A fungal aneurysm in a patient with presumed Tolosa-Hunt syndrome]. 185 58

The Tolosa-Hunt syndrome is a painful ophthalmoplegia in relation with a granulomatous lesion of the cavernous sinus of obscure etiology. The authors report 4 cases diagnosed at National Hospital of Niamey (Republic of Niger). They were 3 men and one woman. The unilateral retro-orbital cephalalgia was constant. Three patients had left oculomotor and abducens nerves' palsies and one only left trochlear nerve's palsy. In three cases the therapeutic efficacy of systemic corticosteroids was dramatic with complete remission of clinical signs. In a fourth case, chlorambucil was used with complete recovery.
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PMID:[Painful ophthalmoplegia of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 4 Nigerian cases]. 189 16

Pain around the eye can be caused by local ophthalmic disorders or by disease of other structures sharing trigeminal nerve sensory innervation. In general, most ocular causes for pain also cause the eye to be red, thus alerting the examiner to the focality of the problem. However, conditions like eyestrain, intermittent angleclosure glaucoma or neovascular glaucoma, and low-grade intraocular inflammation can be painful and not be associated with obvious redness. Ocular signs and symptoms also occur with numerous other causes of headache. Double vision in association with periocular pain can result from orbital lesions, isolated cranial neuropathies, and cavernous sinus lesions. Pupillary abnormalities like Horner's syndrome may result from a variety of painful conditions, including cluster headache, parasellar neoplasms or aneurysms, internal carotid dissection or occlusion, and Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Pain with a dilated and unreactive pupil may reflect a benign condition like Adie's syndrome or ophthalmoplegic migraine, or it may herald the presence of a life-threatening posterior communicating artery aneurysm. Headache and transient visual loss can be manifestations of classic migraine, or be symptoms of ocular hypoperfusion from ipsilateral internal carotid occlusion or increased intracranial pressure from pseudotumor cerebri. In a young patient, head pain with a fixed visual deficit may result from optic neuritis, in an older adult, temporal arteritis may be the culprit. Ophthalmologic aspects of headache thus encompass problems that range from simple and benign to complex and formidable.
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PMID:Ophthalmologic aspects of headache. 202 Feb 23

Nitroglycerin (NG) induces in cluster headache patients and controls an increase in systemic diastolic blood pressure and/or heart rate and a decrease in blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral artery (VMCA). Termination of NG induced cluster headache-like attack was correlated to an increase of VMCA compared to the VMCA before NG administration (p less than 0.01). This increase was not found in patients without attack or in controls. The NG induced "dynamite headache" in the controls subsided when blood pressure and heart rate were normalized, but the decrease of VMCA still prevailed. Orbital phlebograms have shown pathologic changes in cluster headache and in Tolosa-Hunt syndrome but not in controls. Ocular sympathetic nerves are involved in cluster headache but seldom in Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. It is suggested that the start of a cluster headache attack is due to an increase and the termination of the attack to a decrease of blood flow to the sympathoplegic phlebopathic cavernous sinus.
Cephalalgia 1990 Feb
PMID:Cluster headache and "dynamite headache": blood flow velocities in the middle cerebral artery. 210 78

A case of headaches with recurrent paralysis of cranial nerves III, IV, V and VI is reported. A good therapeutic effect was obtained with corticoids. After ruling out other diseases and causes of ophthalmoplegia the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome was diagnosed.
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PMID:[The Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Case report]. 213 35

Charts from patients admitted from April 1976 to March 1986 to the departments of neurology, neurosurgery, ophthalmology and pediatrics serving a population of 615,000 inhabitants in Copenhagen County were surveyed. We then examined patients with coexisting headache and ophthalmoplegia at follow-up. Many diseases may mimic a single attack of ophthalmoplegic migraine. We found 4 cases of ophthalmoplegic migraine, i.e. an annual incidence of 0.7 per million inhabitants. We added another 4 cases from the same area, but diagnosed before or after the study period. Only in 2 of the 8 cases did the ophthalmoplegic episodes fulfil criteria for pain and associated symptoms required for migraine without aura (common migraine). In contrast, the clinical characteristics of the attacks are typical of the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. When this inflammatory disease strikes a migraineur it is likely to elicit headache with migrainous features. We postulate that such cases have been diagnosed as ophthalmoplegic migraine, whereas the proper diagnosis of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome has been made in non-migraineurs.
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PMID:Ophthalmoplegic migraine: diagnostic criteria, incidence of hospitalization and possible etiology. 233 Aug 16


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