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 62 year-old woman presented with a unilateral, incomplete ophthalmoplegia, and pain in the territory of the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve. She had an IgG gamma 2-lambda 2 type myeloma. Opacification by phlebography of the cavernous sinus on the affected side was not possible, neither through the ophthalmic vein nor through the anastomotic coronal veins. This suggested invasion of the sella turcica. Combined radiotherapy and chemotherapy led to rapid and almost total recovery. The lesion recurred 15 months later. Then there was a bilateral oculomotor palsy involving both external recti, and exophthalmos. CT Scan demonstrated a marked increase in size of the external recti. Special features in this case were the oculomotor paralysis and its occurrence as the initial sign of the disease, and its secondary localization in the orbits with bilateral muscle lesions.
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PMID:[Oculomotor lesions and myeloma: a case with a CT scan study (author's transl)]. 724 90

Acute exophthalmos and ophthalmoplegia of the left eye developed in a 58-year-old woman convalescing from a right hemicolectomy for a carcinoid tumor of the colon. Roentgenograms of the orbit and computed tomograms showed a large posterior left orbital mass. Lateral orbitotomy and biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of metastatic carcinoid tumor. Irradiation with radioactive cobalt (60Co) resulted in early relief of the ocular symptoms. To the best of our knowledge, this is the second documented case of orbital metastatic carcinoid tumor and the first patient with orbital involvement from a primary carcinoid tumor of the colon. Orbital irradiation for metastatic orbital carcinoid tumor has not been previously reported and should be used for symptomatic relief, because long-term survival is possible in patients with metastatic carcinoid tumors.
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PMID:Orbital carcinoid tumor metastatic from the colon. 737 61

A case of unilateral exophthalmos with ophthalmoplegia and papilledema which developed 1 week after culture-proven Shigella sonnei dysentery is described. The clinical course with improvement of the patient's eye findings as well as systemic condition on appropriate antibiotic therapy probably demonstrate the relationship between the the dysentery and subsequent orbital inflammation.
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PMID:Orbital inflammation: an unusual extraintestinal complication of shigellosis. Report of a case. 744 89

Painful exophthalmos, ophthalmoplegia, and visual loss in the right eye developed in a 28-year-old man four months after he underwent a radical orchiectomy and irradiation for a seminoma of the right testicle. Prednisone therapy failed to relieve the symptoms, and an orbital biopsy found a metastatic testicular seminoma. Orbital irradiation with radioactive cobalt reduced the exophthalmos, reversed the ophthalmoplegia, and improved his visual acuity. Previous cases of nonmetastatic exophthalmos in patients who had testicular seminoma have been reported, but, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of a patient who had orbital seminoma metastatic from the testis. Successful irradiation of the orbital focus can minimize ocular morbidity and may improve the prognosis.
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PMID:Testicular seminoma metastatic to the orbit. 746 43

Orbital cellulitis, defined as eyelid erythema and edema, proptosis and/or ophthalmoplegia, with or without visual acuity loss, is a rare, but severe infectious disease. The medical records were reviewed of 16 children, aged 18 years or under, who were admitted at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital with a diagnosis of orbital cellulitis during the period from January 1977 to June 1993. The 16 children included 13 males and 3 females. The mean age of the patients was 5.6 years. Sinusitis, diagnosed clinically and radiologically in eight cases, was the most common predisposing factor. From pus or blood in five patients, these pathogens were isolated: Staphylococcus aureus (2), viridans streptococci (1) and mixed bacterial flora (2). All of the patients were treated with systemic antibiotics. The mean duration of fever after initiation of antibiotic therapy was 2.9 days. Four patients subsequently developed complications: subperiosteal abscess (2), orbital abscess (1), and bacteremia (1). Five patients received surgical treatment. No mortality was reported. After a follow-up period of 1-2 months, no sequelae were found among any of these 16 patients.
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PMID:Orbital cellulitis in children: clinical analysis of 16 cases. 757 73

A 54-year-old man first was admitted with a right oculomotor nerve palsy that ameliorated spontaneously. Two months later, he was readmitted with right proptosis, ophthalmoplegia, and optic nerve involvement. MR showed an enlarged right cavernous sinus. There was dramatic improvement after high doses of steroids. MR findings 10 months later were normal. Thus, the diagnosis of the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome was established.
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PMID:Gadopentetate dimeglumine-enhanced MR in the diagnosis of the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 761 Oct 80

A 62-year-old man presented with progressive diplopia, left ptosis, proptosis, complete ophthalmoplegia, facial numbness, and headache of 2 1/2 months' duration. The symptoms started 1 month after surgical resection of a squamous cell carcinoma in the left side of the forehead. Imaging studies helped localize the lesion, correlating with clinical features. The differential diagnosis is discussed. The final diagnosis was confirmed by autopsy.
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PMID:Ophthalmoplegia and facial numbness following treated squamous carcinoma of the forehead. 771 37

Superior orbital fissure syndrome is a rare condition that presents itself as gross and persistent edema of the periorbital tissues, proptosis, subconjunctival ecchymosis, ptosis, ophthalmoplegia, dilation of the pupil, absence of direct light reflex and presence of consensual light reflex. The corneal reflex is lost, sensation is diminished over the forehead, and it is possible that the dimensions of the superior orbital fissure are reduced. Infection, however, is not often reported as the etiology. The case presented here describes an unusual occurrence of superior orbital fissure syndrome secondary to an infected dentigerous cyst of the maxillary sinus and its management.
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PMID:Superior orbital fissure syndrome. Secondary to infected dentigerous cyst of the maxillary sinus. 780 20

A 3-year-old boy presented with uniocular proptosis and ophthalmoplegia. Investigation revealed a mass involving the right orbit with extension into the left orbit and paranasal sinuses, and intracranial extension involving both frontal lobes. Biopsy of an enlarged cervical node and the intranasal mass revealed esthesioneuroblastoma. This tumor has been reported rarely in a child this age, and only 12 case reports document patients under 10 years of age. The presentation as an orbital mass is previously unreported and must now be considered in the differential diagnosis of proptosis in childhood. The usual clinical, radiological, and pathological features of olfactory esthesioneuroblastoma are reviewed.
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PMID:Esthesioneuroblastoma presenting as an orbital mass in a young child. 810 59

Two cases of non-invasive aspergillosis of the nose and paranasal sinuses are described. The first presented with left proptosis and ophthalmoplegia. Imaging and histology showed a maxillary sinus aspergilloma. The second case presented as a compressive optic neuropathy and histology showed allergic aspergillus sinusitis. The pathological distinction between invasive and non-invasive forms of aspergillus sinusitis is important as in invasive aspergillosis surgical treatment is most effectively combined with systemic antifungal treatment, whereas in aspergilloma of the paranasal sinuses surgical drainage of the sinuses alone is usually sufficient, and in allergic aspergillus sinusitis surgery is best combined with systemic or topical steroids. The distinction between invasive and non-invasive forms is particularly important as both may present with cranial neuropathies.
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PMID:Neuro-ophthalmological presentation of non-invasive Aspergillus sinus disease in the non-immunocompromised host. 812 16


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