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

Periocular pain may result from local pathology or be referred from distant sites. Ophthalmic examination will detect most local disease, although a careful search may be needed to determine the cause of subtle entities. Painful ophthalmoplegia results from a variety of neoplasms and inflammations, often in the area of the cavernous sinus. Cluster headache should be differentiated from more sinister causes of painful Horner's syndrome. Systemic diseases that cause periocular pain and migraine and other classic headache syndromes that may present with eye pain alone are also discussed.
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PMID:Ocular and periocular pain. 268 63

Painful ophthalmoplegia is an important presenting complaint to emergency departments, ophthalmologists, and neurologists. The etiological differential diagnosis of painful ophthalmoplegia is extensive and consists of numerous sinister etiologies including vascular (eg, aneurysm, carotid dissection, carotid-cavernous fistula), neoplasms (eg, primary intracranial tumors, local or distant metastases), inflammatory conditions (eg, orbital pseudotumor, sarcoidosis, Tolosa-Hunt syndrome), infectious etiologies (eg, fungal, mycobacterial), and other conditions (eg, microvascular infarcts secondary to diabetes, ophthalmoplegic migraine, giant cell arteritis). A systematic approach to the evaluation of painful ophthalmoplegia can lead to prompt recognition of serious disorders that if left untreated, can be associated with significant morbidity or mortality. Inflammatory conditions such as Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and orbital pseudotumor are highly responsive to corticosteroids, but should be diagnoses of exclusion.
Curr Pain Headache Rep 2004 Aug
PMID:Painful ophthalmoplegia: overview with a focus on Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 1522 94