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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two cases of unilateral uveitis which appeared in association with
chickenpox
are presented. In one of them internal
ophthalmoplegia
was seen. Possible pathogenic mechanisms are discussed. The unusual cycloplegia which was present in one case can be caused by viral lesion to the ciliary nerves.
...
PMID:Uveitis and ophthalmoplegia complicating chickenpox. 60 40
A six year old girl with a six day history of
varicella
presented with a fixed dilated pupil, paralysis of accomodation and an anterior uveitis in the left eye. The anterior uveitis rapidly resolved but the internal
ophthalmoplegia
has persisted for fifteen months. Four similar cases are reviewed.
...
PMID:Internal ophthalmoplegia following chickenpox. 94 39
We report a case of unilateral internal
ophthalmoplegia
associated with
varicella
zoster in a five-year-old boy. Pupillary dilatation and accommodative paralysis persist after three years. A brisk reaction to topical pilocarpine suggests a denervation. Bifocal spectacle correction has restored the visual acuity.
...
PMID:Internal ophthalmoplegia--a complication of ocular varicella. 849 41
A 76-year-old man with herpetic vesicle in the right auricle developed ipsilateral 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th cranial nerves involvement and pain in the dermatome of the second cervical nerve. The CSF study revealed elevated opening pressure up to 220 mmH2O, and pleocytosis up to 151 cells/mm3. Ninety-nine percent of the CSF cells were mononuclear cells. CSF protein was 47 mg/dl, and CSF glucose was 62 mg/dl. On the 24th hospital day the CSF cells decreased to 13/mm3 with 100% mononuclear cells. Titer of
varicella
-zoster virus (VZV) antibody was significantly elevated in CSF. Brain MRI and ABR demonstrated no abnormality. Although disorders of 5th and 6th cranial nerves and second cervical nerve improved, mild facial nerve palsy lasted and hearing disturbance showed no recovery. There are only seven cases of Ramsay Hunt syndrome associated with external
ophthalmoplegia
in the literature. However, un like the present case, none of these cases presented disorders of upper cervical nerves. In this case, we speculate that spreading of reactivated VZV caused local meningitis and multiple cranial nerve involvement as well as the second cervical nerve.
...
PMID:[A case of Ramsay Hunt syndrome associated with local meningitis, multiple cranial neuropathy, and the second cervical nerve involvement]. 1039 78
We report a patient with the
varicella
zoster viral (VZV) infection of multiple cranial nerves mimicking Garcin syndrome, who initially presented with Ramsay Hunt syndrome (herpes zoster oticus). A 78-year-old man showed left facial palsy with zosteric eruptions in his left auricle and dysphagia, followed by left total
ophthalmoplegia
. His serum anti-VZV antibody titer was elevated. Cerebrospinal fluid examination revealed pleocytosis with a slightly elevated protein level. He was treated with intravenous acyclovir and corticosteroids. His tongue weakness resolved, and then ocular movement improved. The improvement of facial palsy and swallowing difficulty was delayed. VZV infection should be considered even in patients who show unilateral multiple cranial neuropathy mimicking Garcin syndrome because it is treatable.
...
PMID:An extremely unusual presentation of varicella zoster viral infection of cranial nerves mimicking Garcin syndrome. 1622 70
A 75-year-old woman developed trigeminal
varicella
-zoster virus infection complicated by
ophthalmoplegia
, and visual loss followed by recurrent cerebral infarctions involving small and large intracranial arteries. Medical therapy improved her
ophthalmoplegia
, but she developed a right hemiparesis and aphasia.
...
PMID:Multiple brain infarcts after orbital inflammation. 1958 37
Reactivation of
varicella
zoster virus (VZV) from latently infected human ganglia usually produces herpes zoster (shingles), characterized by dermatomal distribution pain and rash. Zoster is often followed by chronic pain (postherpetic neuralgia or PHN) as well as meningitis or meningoencephalitis, cerebellitis, isolated cranial nerve palsies that produce
ophthalmoplegia
or the Ramsay Hunt syndrome, multiple cranial nerve palsies (polyneuritis cranialis), vasculopathy, myelopathy, and various inflammatory disorders of the eye. Importantly, VZV reactivation can produce chronic radicular pain without rash (zoster sine herpete), as well as all the neurological disorders listed above without rash. The protean neurological and ocular disorders produced by VZV in the absence of rash are a challenge to the practicing clinician. The presentation of these conditions varies from acute to subacute to chronic. Virological confirmation requires the demonstration of amplifiable VZV DNA in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) or in blood mononuclear cells, or the presence of anti-VZV IgG antibody in CSF or of anti-VZV IgM antibody in CSF or serum.
...
PMID:Neurological disease produced by varicella zoster virus reactivation without rash. 2018 14
We report our findings for a patient with orbital apex syndrome associated with herpes zoster ophthalmicus. Our patient was initially admitted to a neighborhood hospital because of nausea and loss of appetite of 10 days' duration. The day after hospitalization, she developed skin vesicles along the first division of the trigeminal nerve, with severe lid swelling and conjunctival injection. On suspicion of meningoencephalitis caused by
varicella
zoster virus, antiviral therapy with vidarabine and betamethasone was started. Seventeen days later, complete ptosis and
ophthalmoplegia
developed in the right eye. The light reflex in the right eye was absent and anisocoria was present, with the right pupil larger than the left. Fat-suppressed enhanced T1-weighted magnetic resonance images showed high intensity areas in the muscle cone, cavernous sinus, and orbital optic nerve sheath. Our patient was diagnosed with orbital apex syndrome, and because of skin vesicles in the first division of the trigeminal nerve, the orbital apex syndrome was considered to be caused by herpes zoster ophthalmicus. After the patient was transferred to our hospital, prednisolone 60 mg and vidarabine antiviral therapy was started, and fever and headaches disappeared five days later. The
ophthalmoplegia
and optic neuritis, but not the anisocoria, gradually resolved during tapering of oral therapy. From the clinical findings and course, the cause of the orbital apex syndrome was most likely invasion of the orbital apex and cavernous sinus by the herpes virus through the trigeminal nerve ganglia.
...
PMID:Orbital apex syndrome associated with herpes zoster ophthalmicus. 2214 Mar 5
The authors report a case of internal
ophthalmoplegia
in a 5-year-old boy presenting after primary
varicella
infection. This is an uncommon and mostly irreversible ocular manifestation after
chickenpox
. The internal
ophthalmoplegia
showed a potential mild improvement with oral acyclovir. Consideration should be given to starting treatment on presentation in such cases.
...
PMID:A case of internal ophthalmoplegia associated with varicella zoster. 2288 30
Viral infection is a rare cause of painful
ophthalmoplegia
. We report on a 67-year-old patient who developed painful double vision after a vesicular skin rash on the left forehead. MRI disclosed simultaneous inflammatory lesions in all extraocular muscles, the second and third cranial nerve, as well as pathological signal intensity along the spinal trigeminal tract and nucleus within the medulla oblongata and the pons. Cerebrospinal fluid and serum tests for
varicella
zoster were positive. The patient was treated effectively with intravenous acyclovir and methylprednisolone. Simultaneous lesions in various neighbouring neural structures may be characteristic for the highly neurotropic behaviour of the herpesviridae and should be considered as a cause of painful
ophthalmoplegia
that can be depicted by appropriate imaging.
...
PMID:Painful ophthalmoplegia with simultaneous orbital myositis, optic and oculomotor nerve inflammation and trigeminal nucleus involvement in a patient with herpes zoster ophthalmicus. 2310 14
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