Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (ophthalmoplegia)
3,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 15-year-old girl had rapid onset of an apparent bilateral internal ophthalmoplegia. Subsequent evaluation revealed a large craniopharyngioma. It is uncommon for a mass to cause such eye findings and unique for a craniopharyngioma to manifest in this fashion.
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PMID:Craniopharyngioma simulating bilateral internal ophthalmoplegia. 735 27

Pituitary abscesses are rare. The case reported here concerns a 28-year old African. Gradual development of diplopia over 6 months was the first clinical manifestation. Three months later this development had reached a more severe and infectious context, with complete right ophthalmoplegia, meningitis and coma (GCS = 9). CT scan showed an image in favour of a pituitary abscess with suprasellar extension, associated with thrombophlebitis of the cavernous sinus. An antibiotic therapy consisting of cefotaxime and metronidazole administered for 1 month, and netilmicin for 15 days succeeded in controlling the infectious syndrome. This resulted in cure of visual disorders, reduction in size of the CT scan image and reconstruction of the pituitary sella which had been destroyed. The diagnosis of pituitary abscess should be made when confronted with an infectious syndrome (unexplained fever, repeated meningitis). CT does not recognize the nature of the hypophyseal mass it shows: necrosis of a pituitary adenoma, giant aneurysm or craniopharyngioma may mimic local infection. Surgery confirms the diagnosis and is regarded as the best treatment. The patient's life is threatened when meningitis is present, and the functional prognosis is poor when recovery from visual disorders is compromised due to late diagnosis. In this paper a comparative analysis of the clinical course of the disease and therapeutic data in our patient is presented and compared with other reported cases.
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PMID:[Pituitary abscess, treated by medication]. 802 74

The present study was done to observe the ophthalmic manifestations in patients with intracranial tumor. This was a prospective, purposive, consecutive, observational study conducted in patients with radiologically proven intracranial tumors in the department of Ophthalmology with collaboration of Department of Neuro-surgery of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University from January 2006 to December 2010. All cases had tissue histopathology confirmation post-operatively. The most common type of intracranial tumor was pituitary adenoma (58.04%), followed by craniopharyngioma (20.53%), posterior fossa tumour (12.50%) [medulloblestoma, ependymoma], meningioma (8.04%) [sphenoidalwing meningioma, petroclavel meningioma, oligodendroglioma] and others (0.89%) [nasopharyngial carcinoma, esthesio - astrocytoma]. Common neuro-ophthalmological findings were visual blur (91.07%), visual field defect (71.42%), optic disc changes (50%), pupillary light reaction defect (48.21%) and colour vision defect (46.42%). The study shows, pituitary adenoma is the most common tumor that impairs the visual pathway structures followed by craniopharyngioma, posterior fossa tumour & meningioma. Furthermore, decreased visual acuity, visual field defect, abnormal optic discs, relative afferent pupillary defect and ophthalmoplegia etc. are the common neuro-ophthalmic features that should be carefully examined for early detection of intracranial tumors.
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PMID:Evaluation of ophthalmic manifestations in patients with intracranial tumours. 2485 53