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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a patient who rapidly developed unilateral proptosis and complete
ophthalmoplegia
following blunt trauma to the orbit. Computed tomography (CT) scan revealed a mass involving the sinuses and orbit with erosion of the cribriform plate. Biopsy of this suspected neoplasm revealed features consistent with allergic Aspergillus
sinusitis
, but cultures later grew a Bipolaris species. Our review of the literature suggests that when allergic fungal
sinusitis
involves the orbit, Bipolaris is a more commonly isolated organism than Aspergillus. Additionally, extraocular motility impairment and proptosis occur more frequently than visual loss. Treatment is controversial, but surgical drainage followed by corticosteroids is the most often recommended therapy.
...
PMID:Bipolaris-induced orbital cellulitis. 128 50
Subperiosteal abscess of the orbit (SPA) in childhood is an uncommon but serious sequela of
sinusitis
, with partial or complete visual loss as the most common complication. Traditional management of SPA has combined systemic antibiotics with immediate surgical drainage. The records of 120 children admitted from 1982-1986 with the diagnosis of periorbital or orbital cellulitis were reviewed. Ten cases of SPA were documented by CT scan (8%). Antecedent ethmoid
sinusitis
was present in all cases. Five SPA patients were managed with intravenous antibiotics and nasal decongestants alone. All had complete clinical and radiographic resolution without complication. The remaining 5 patients underwent surgical drainage. Two patients required immediate drainage due to total
ophthalmoplegia
upon presentation. One case of postoperative epidural abscess occurred one week after external fronto-ethmoidectomy among these two patients. The remaining 3 patients did not respond adequately to medical therapy alone and underwent surgical drainage without complication. Length of hospital stay in both medical and surgical groups was similar. We conclude that SPA can be safely managed by medical therapy alone in selected cases. Criteria for surgical intervention of documented SPA while on optimal medical therapy should include: worsening of visual acuity or ocular motility, or failure to improve clinically within 48 h. The presence of SPA alone should no longer be considered an absolute indication for surgery.
...
PMID:Selective non-surgical management of subperiosteal abscess of the orbit: computerized tomography and clinical course as indication for surgical drainage. 843 77
Extension of sphenoethmoiditis into the orbital apex may result in visual loss and
ophthalmoplegia
, but minimal signs of orbital pathology such as proptosis, chemosis, or lid edema. This entity is termed orbital apex syndrome. The case of a 74-year-old woman with orbital apex syndrome and irreversible unilateral visual loss secondary to bacterial sphenoethmoiditis is presented. This case, and our review of the literature, suggest that patients with symptomatic acute sphenoethmoiditis are at a relatively higher risk of permanent visual loss than those with
sinusitis
not involving the posterior ethmoid and/or sphenoid sinuses.
...
PMID:Irreversible unilateral visual loss due to acute sinusitis. 184 69
A childhood case of painful
ophthalmoplegia
which responded well to steroids was described. Although the clinical features suggested Tolosa-Hunt syndrome (THS), serial magnetic resonance imagings (MRI) revealed ethmoid and sphenoid
sinusitis
in this 7-year-old boy. It was considered that multiple factors such as allergy, viral infection and swimming predisposed him to develop severe
sinusitis
and gave rise to his painful
ophthalmoplegia
.
...
PMID:Steroid-responsive painful ophthalmoplegia in childhood: sphenoid sinusitis presenting as Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 195 78
A 49 year old woman with a fluctuating painful
ophthalmoplegia
and a history of polyarthralgia is reported. On examination, additional findings included a maxillary subcutaneous infiltration, sphenoidal
sinusitis
and pulmonary nodes. Lung and sinus biopsy demonstrated findings compatible with lymphomatoid granulomatosis. The patient was treated with prednisone and cyclophosphamide, with good response of neurological and dermatological findings.
...
PMID:[Lymphomatoid granulomatosis: a clinical case]. 229 76
Orbital cellulitis secondary to adjacent paranasal
sinusitis
presents with marked proptosis,
ophthalmoplegia
, eyelid edema, chemosis, and/or conjunctival hyperemia. These conditions often precede visual dysfunction. "Posterior" orbital cellulitis secondary to sphenoethmoidal
sinusitis
may be defined as the clinical syndrome in which early severe visual loss overshadows or precedes accompanying inflammatory orbital signs. The visual loss may be attributed to involvement of the intracanalicular or orbital apical segment of the optic nerve. Total irreversible unilateral visual loss developed in three patients with this syndrome. Severe visual loss was preceded by diplopia in one patient and by bilateral eyelid edema in another. One patient with chronic panparanasal
sinusitis
with acute visual loss presented with isolated optic disc edema. Proptosis and ductional restriction subsequently developed. The irreversible blindness in these cases may be due to a combination of intracanalicular edema and vasculitis causing optic nerve infarction.
...
PMID:Acute severe irreversible visual loss with sphenoethmoiditis-'posterior' orbital cellulitis. 382 9
Although thyrotoxicosis and orbital complications of acute ethmoid or frontal
sinusitis
are among the most common causes of unilateral exophthalmos, inflammatory pseudotumor is frequently accompanied by progressive acute unilateral proptosis. Because the associated chemosis, scleral erythema, and
ophthalmoplegia
constitute a spectrum of clinical findings present in numerous inflammatory orbital disorders and systemic diseases, the diagnosis of inflammatory pseudotumor is one of exclusion, often requiring orbital biopsy. Four patients without evidence of
sinusitis
, endocrinopathy, collagen vascular disease, or Wegener's granulomatosis are described. The diagnosis of orbital pseudotumor was disclosed by computed axial tomography, thus avoiding orbitotomy. The finding of scleral and choroidal thickening with enhancement following intravenous contrast injection represents a select group of patients with orbital pseudotumor and differentiates them from patients with endocrine exophthalmopathy or neoplasms. This noninvasive technique is extremely valuable because early diagnosis is critical for successful treatment. All four patients responded dramatically to high-dose corticosteroid therapy. In the absence of significant clinical response, however, Wegener's granulomatosis, lymphoma, and rhabdomyosarcoma, especially in younger patients, must be carefully excluded. Orbital exploration or decompression or both are used when proptosis, headache, or orbital pain does not resolve promptly, visual acuity deteriorates, or the diagnosis remains unknown.
...
PMID:Computerized axial tomography in inflammatory pseudotumor of the orbit. 682 19
The terms periorbital (preseptal) and orbital cellulitis are often used interchangeably, obscuring important differences in their pathogenesis, bacterial etiology, clinical presentation and appropriate therapy. A review of 56 cases of periorbital cellulitis indicated that the patients could be divided into three groups: Group 1, cases secondary to paranasal
sinusitis
, more correctly termed inflammatory edema because the periorbital swelling is due to venous obstruction (a specific bacterial etiology is rarely documented in these patients because aspiration and culture of the sinuses are usually not performed and the infection is not associated with bacterial invasion of either the soft tissue or the blood stream); Group 2, cases associated with disruption of local skin integrity which are usually due to Staphylococcus aureus or Group A streptococci; and Group 3, cases associated with bacteremia usually occurring in infants and young children without other apparent foci of infection and caused by Haemophilus influenzae type b or Streptococcus pneumoniae. Actual infection of the orbital contents (orbital cellulitis or abscess), marked by proptosis and
ophthalmoplegia
, is rare and is due either to advanced purulent
sinusitis
or to penetrating orbital trauma.
...
PMID:Periorbital cellulitis and paranasal sinusitis: a reappraisal. 717 9
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.
...
PMID:Orbital cellulitis in children: clinical analysis of 16 cases. 757 73
Sphenoid
sinusitis
is a rare, often misdiagnosed, potentially lifethreatening infection. We report two cases of chronic sphenoid
sinusitis
presenting as painful
ophthalmoplegia
. We emphasize the difficulty of the diagnosis due to the deep-seated position of the cavity. The availability of CT and MRI should allow an early diagnosis. Attention has to be paid to the sphenoid sinus on every cranial image. In the chronic as well as in the acute form, the treatment is an emergency. Surgery procedures should be considered when antibiotics are inefficient. Sphenoid
sinusitis
must be considered in the diagnosis of painful
ophthalmoplegia
.
...
PMID:[Painful ophthalmoplegia caused by chronic sphenoid sinusitis. Contribution of imaging]. 786 86
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