Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Head movement-dependent oscillopsia (HMDO) with peripheral vestibular, brainstem and cerebellar lesions is reviewed. The differentiation of this kind of oscillopsia is based mainly on clinical grounds. HMDO with bilateral abolition of caloric responses, and in the absence of disease of the central nervous system, is due to bilateral vestibular disease. HMDO in patients with internuclear
ophthalmoplegia
and other brainstem signs is probably due to a lesion of VOR pathways in or near the medial longitudinal fasciculus. The occurrence of HMDO with ataxia of gait and cerebellar eye movement disorders (rebound nystagmus,
flutter
-like oscillations), in the absence of brainstem lesions (medial longitudinal fasciculus), is clinical evidence for HMDO due to a cerebellar lesion. An attempt is made to associate the different kinds of oscillopsia with current knowledge of the vestibulo-ocular reflexes.
...
PMID:Clinical and theoretical aspects of head movement dependent oscillopsia (HMDO). A review. 8 58
Several structures, located at different levels in the Central Nervous System (CNS), collaborate to the control and realization of ocular movements (O.M.) Therefore, alterations of oculomotricity, of varying degree and of different kinds, may be found in a lot of diseases of the CNS. The study of O.M., expecially when carried out by means of specific techniques such as electro-oculography, may represent an useful tool in the diagnosis (both from a topographic and an etiological standpoint) and in the follow-up of patients, possibly also allowing a precise evaluation of therapy effectiveness. In this review the Authors briefly examine the role of the supranuclear structures mostly involved in the control and in the execution of oculomotricity and the characteristics of the different types of O.M. (rapid and slow, vergence movements). Successively, they analyze the semeiological features of supra-nuclear disturbances of O.M., describing alterations of saccadic movements (slowing, dysmetria) and of smooth pursuit, fixation instability (square waves,
flutter
, opsoclonus, nystagmus,...) and other alterations of O.M. (ocular bobbing, see-saw nystagmus, skew deviation,...). Successively, disturbances of O.M. are analyzed in relation to their topodiagnostic significance, describing oculomotor involvements due to focal lesions of different areas of CNS (frontal cortex, parieto-occipital cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum, brainstem) and particular syndromes (Foville syndromes, locked-in syndrome, Parinaud syndrome, anterior internuclear
ophthalmoplegia
, "one and a half" syndrome, Balint syndrome,...). Finally, particular attention is drawn to the oculomotor disturbances observed in degenerative cerebellar and multisystemic diseases, and several abnormal "oculomotor patterns", which seem to be specifically related to particular diseases, are described. In particular, the oculomotor patterns of Steele-Richardson-Olszewsky disease (slowing and hypometria of horizontal saccades, loss of upward saccades with preservation of reflex movements) and of Friedreich ataxia (fixation instability mostly due to the occurrence of square waves, saccadic dysmetria, impairment of smooth pursuit) are stressed.
...
PMID:[The physiopathology of supranuclear structures in oculomotor disorders]. 219 86
An increased compendium of drugs useful in ocular motor system dysfunction has expanded our capacity to treat selected ocular motility disorders. Adjunctive therapeutic modes (e.g., Fresnel prisms and orthoptic exercises) can also be beneficial. PAN and see-saw nystagmus can be treated with baclofen. Downbeat nystagmus may respond to clonazepam therapy, and prisms may help if the nystagmus can be modified with convergence. Congenital nystagmus may respond minimally to drugs (e.g., baclofen), but prisms or surgical procedures, or both, are still the primary treatment modalities. Innovar may be helpful in patients with severe, incapacitating vestibular disorders, and scopolamine alone or in combination with promethazine may be beneficial in patients with milder ambulatory acute peripheral vestibular disorders. Benign positional vertigo is best treated initially with positional exercises before drug therapy is instituted. Opsoclonus and ocular
flutter
have been treated successfully with corticosteroids, propranolol, and clonazepam, while microflutter, an extremely rare disorder, can resolve with baclofen. Although therapy with carbamazepine, 5-hydroxtryptophan, and scopolamine has been useful in selected patients with ocular palatal myoclonus, most do not respond to drug treatment. It is not usually necessary to treat voluntary nystagmus, but Fresnel prism lenses should be remembered in refractory patients. Potentially reversible and pseudointernuclear ophthalmoplegias also were discussed. Orthoptic exercises can be beneficial in posttraumatic internuclear
ophthalmoplegia
. Selected supranuclear palsies can be improved completely with the proper drug regimen. Lastly, superior oblique myokymia can be treated successfully with carbamazepine, with tight surveillance for possible adverse side effects. Descriptive phenomenology and pathophysiological localization must be correlated with brain stem neurochemistry and neuropharmacology to medically treat additional ocular motor system disorders.
...
PMID:Medical treatment of nystagmus and ocular motor disorders. 349 76
A clinical evaluation of visual and central oculomotor defects are presented in a series of 56 patients who were HIV carriers, of whom 47 fulfilled criteria for AIDS. Changes were detected in 22% of the asymptomatic patients (2/9), in 36% of the AIDS patients with no neurological complications and in 93% (15/16) of the AIDS patients with neurological involvement. Some changes were seen in 55% of the patients with AIDS. The commonest defects were alterations of saccadic movements and visual pursuit (35% respectively) and of opticokinetic nystagmus (28%). Only one homonymous visual defect was found. No brain stem syndromes were seen, except for one case of bilateral internuclear
ophthalmoplegia
. The commonest neurological complications were toxoplasmosis, the AIDS dementia complex (ADC) and multifocal leukoencephalopathy (MLP). Neuro-ophthalmological changes are described, in the literature, in 2-12%. Central oculomotor disorders, including supranuclear, nuclear and internuclear ophthalmoplegias are frequent and probably underestimated. Nystagmus is a common sign and there are isolated descriptions of
flutter
, opsoclonus and ocular dipping. The causes of visual and oculomotor changes reflect the incidence of parenchymatous neurological complications of AIDS. MLP is the commonest cause of change in the retrogeniculate optic pathways. Oculographic studies show changes in saccadic movements and ocular pursuit and signs of unstable visual fixation. These changes are seen in all ADC patients, in a large proportion of those without dementia and also in asymptomatic carriers, suggesting that oculography may be useful for prognosis.
...
PMID:[Visual and central oculomotor disorders in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 906 84