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)

Two women, one with Hodgkin's disease and the other with no malignancy, developed herpes zoster with optic neuropathy and total ophthalmoplegia. Both patients developed an associated mild meningoencephalitis with a predominantly lymphocytic spinal fluid reaction that cleared spontaneously. The patient with Hodgkin's disease suffered a protracted course of the disease and developed a secondary bacterial endophthalmitis that necessitated an envisceration of the left eye. The patient without evidence of immunologic deficit recovered quickly with administration of corticosteroids.
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PMID:Orbital apex syndrome secondary to herpes zoster ophthalmicus. 30 54

A case of exophthalmic myositis was identified by a secondary herpes zoster exacerbation. The herpes zoster exophthalmus in this case remained - in contrast to all other cases so far published - free of signs of ophthalmoplegia and retrobulbar neuritis with visual acuity loss.
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PMID:[Herpes zoster-exophthalmus without ophthalmoplegia (author's transl)]. 31 75

Herpes zoster ophthalmicus was seen in 22 cases out of 195 cases of herpes zoster (11.3% incidence). It was affecting mainly adults (90.9%). Oedema over the lids (81.8%) was invariably present and lead to ptosis. Mucopurulent conjunctivitis, predominantly mucoid (72.7%) was the commonest manifestation associated with vesicles over the lid margins. Sectorial (22.7%) and diffuse (9.1%) episcleritis appeared in later part of first week, while nodular episcleritis was observed in one case only on 12th day of the disease. Nummular keratitis was seen in 31.8% of cases between 8-10 days. Iritis and iridocyclitis was seen in 45.4% of cases out of which 36.3% had secondary ocular hypertension (glaucoma). Neuroparalytic keratitis and internal ophthalmoplegia were detected in one patient each. Postherpetic neuralgia occurred in 22.7% of cases and was uncommon in younger age group (below 40 years, 4.5%). Carbamazepine was effective in relieving the herpetic pain.
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PMID:Clinical profile of herpes zoster ophthalmicus. 174 74

The authors report the cases of two patients who had sudden unilateral alternating and regressive attacks of the cranial nerves. The first patient, a 63 year old diabetic woman, suffered regressive paralysis of the right third nerve, followed two months later by paresthesia of the same side of the face, accompanied by difficulty in swallowing and dysarthria. Six months later, she developed a right facial paralysis while pharyngeal and lingual involvement entirely disappeared. Right carotid angiography revealed stenosis of the middle meningeal artery. Nine months later she developed left-sided ophthalmoplegia followed by a homolateral facial paralysis. The second patient, a 24 year old woman, developed homolateral regressive attacks of the II, V, VII and VIIb, and VIII nerves during recovery from herpes zoster of the right geniculate ganglion. Doppler studies showed inversion of the flow in the right ophthalmic artery. The pathogenesis of these multiple paralyses of the cranial nerves is discussed, a possible cause being ischaemic attacks of the vascular territories of the cranial nerves.
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PMID:[2 cases of vascular syndrome of the cranial nerves of ischemic origin]. 266 Jun 50

Ophthalmoplegia occurs infrequently in herpes zoster ophthalmicus. The third nerve appears to be the most commonly affected and the fourth nerve the least. We describe herein the clinical course of six patients with herpes zoster ophthalmoplegia. Spontaneous recovery occurred in four patients. The pathogenesis and clinical features of this syndrome are described.
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PMID:Herpes zoster ophthalmoplegia. Report of six cases. 297 83

The authors describe two cases of ophthalmic herpes zoster complicated with ophthalmoplegia. This rare complication developed in the 2nd week after beginning of the disease and it is only slightly influenced by antiviral therapy, but improvement was observed after the administration of corticosteroids. A short overview summarizes the diagnostic possibilities, the therapy and the complication of the disease.
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PMID:[Ophthalmoplegia in herpes zoster: clinical review based on two case reports]. 836 48

External ocular muscle palsies in patients with ophthalmic zoster are traditionally interpreted as diseases of III, IV or VI cranial nerves. Orbital myositis associated with zoster ophthalmicus has been diagnosed only rarely. We describe a patient with ophthalmic zoster and external ophthalmoplegia due to ocular myositis demonstrated by MR imaging. Treatment with acyclovir and cortisone resulted in a rapid improvement of the ophthalmoplegia. In ophthalmic herpes zoster associated with external ocular muscle palsies, ocular myositis is an important differential diagnosis to inflammatory involvement of the cranial nerves III, IV, and VI.
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PMID:External ophthalmoplegia due to ocular myositis in a patient with ophthalmic herpes zoster. 1521 Jan 67

We report a case of a 73-year-old patient with complete ophthalmoplegia following an episode of ophthalmic herpes zoster. MRI showed an associated ipsilateral temporal meningioma with cavernous sinus extension. We discuss the possible responsibility of these two conditions in the ocular motor signs.
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PMID:[Complete ophthalmoplegia complicating ophthalmic herpes zoster]. 1610 13

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.
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PMID:An extremely unusual presentation of varicella zoster viral infection of cranial nerves mimicking Garcin syndrome. 1622 70

Motor loss caused by herpes zoster is infrequent, and only a few studies have focused on ocular motor paralysis in ophthalmic herpes zoster. We report a case of complete ophthalmoplegia resulting from ophthalmic herpes zoster. A 69-year-old man presented with complete left-side ptosis with total ophthalmoplegia 7 days after the onset of left ophthalmic herpes zoster. The patient was treated with aciclovir and prednisolone. Five months later, the ptosis had resolved and the extraocular motility had almost returned to normal.
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PMID:Complete ophthalmoplegia after herpes zoster. 1713 85


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