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)

The author reports 12 cases of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome, a benign steroid-resistant cryptogenic granuloma that presents as painful ophthalmoplegia. This syndrome is differentiated from other causes of painful ophthalmoplegia including tumors, aneurysms, collagen disease, specific infections, mucoceles, and benign granulomas of unknown etiology. These other conditions should be excluded by appropriate tests. Surgical exploration is not necessary if there is a prompt remission on steroid therapy.
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PMID:Tolosa-Hunt syndrome: one cause of painful ophthalmoplegia. 126 13

A 37-year old man, who had repeatedly suffered from transient ophthalmoplegia in his left eye at the age of 29 and 36, developed left painful ophthalmoplegia accompanied by ipsilateral facial nerve palsy in August, 1991. Neurological examination revealed involvement of the left oculomotor, trochlear, ophthalmic division of the trigeminal, abducens, facial and vestibular nerves. Gadolinium-enhanced MRI which was taken at the acute phase of the illness demonstrated markedly enhanced left cavernous sinus and adjacent thickened dura mater in the middle cranial fossa. At the remission phase after starting corticosteroid therapy, these enhanced lesions were no longer observed even in enhanced MRI studies. We diagnosed him as suffering from Tolosa-Hunt syndrome presently accompanied by facial and vestibular nerve damage because of his history of illness, confined lesion in the left cavernous sinus and steroid-induced remission. We concluded that Tolosa-Hunt syndrome may be accompanied by damage of other cranial nerves in its course and that repeated gadolinium-enhanced MRIs are necessary for diagnosis and observation of the patients.
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PMID:[A case of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome accompanied by facial and vestibular nerve damage]. 141 43

Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and orbital myositis have common features such as ocular pain, ophthalmoplegia and exophthalmos. Both syndromes are thought to be caused by a granulomatous inflammation involving the cavernous sinus area in the former and the orbital cavity in the latter. The question whether these two conditions represent different presentations of a single disease, or they belong to different entities has not been settled. To address this question, we reviewed our cases having clinical diagnosis of either Tolosa-Hunt syndrome or orbital myositis. Six cases were diagnosed as Tolosa-Hunt syndrome, and 7 orbital myositis. In the thin-slice enlarged orbital CT, hypertrophic and high-density changes of at least one of the extraocular muscles were found in all cases with orbital myositis, but in none of the patients with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. The age of onset was younger and the duration of the disease before admission was shorter in Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. They responded to steroid therapy better than those with orbital myositis. These findings lead us to conclude that Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and orbital myositis belong to different syndromes, although clinical manifestations have many similarities. Then we studied the relationship between the hypertrophic change of the extraocular muscle and the direction of the oculomotor restriction. For this purpose four additional cases with dysthyroid ophthalmopathy were also studied. We found that the presence of hypertrophic change was frequently associated with the restriction of ocular movement to the direction not only of the hypertrophic muscle but also of the opposite muscle.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical and neuroradiological studies on orbital myositis and Tolosa-Hunt syndrome]. 142 37

Twenty consecutive patients with recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome were studied. One had a parent who suffered from recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Thirty-three percent of the patients had also recurrent periods of weeks to months of unilateral periorbital pain without ophthalmoplegia. One patient had cluster headache before the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome started. Some patients had involvement of cranial nerves outside the cavernous sinus region during Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and also between episodes. The same systemic symptoms, i.e. back pain, cold feet, arthralgia, gut problems, varices, vertigo, chronic fatigue, thrombophlebitis, memory deficiency and signs of inflammation in serum, occurred in Tolosa-Hunt syndrome as earlier found in patients with orbital venous vasculitis. Seventy-three percent of the patients had pathologic orbital phlebograms. All patients treated with steroids reacted promptly; four who developed chronic pain syndromes were treated satisfactorily with azathioprine.
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PMID:Recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 155 57

This is a case of a 38-year-old male who developed painful ophthalmoplegia two years after head injury. Under the impression of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome, the patient received long term unsustained oral steroid therapy for two years. Persistent growth of the parasellar lesion was confirmed by computed tomography. Due to the aggravation of the symptoms, craniotomy and partial parasellar granulation tissue extirpation were performed. Symptoms were then gradually subsided. The pathological study confirmed the presence of granulation tissue with marked acute and chronic inflammatory cells. No evidence of malignancy was noted. No further steroid treatment was rendered to the patient and he was well in the following 18 months after the operation.
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PMID:[Tolosa-Hunt syndrome--case report]. 165 97

A case of fungal aneurysm associated with presumed Tolosa-Hunt syndrome is reported. A 57-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with complaints of left blepharoptosis, headache and weight loss. Neurological examination revealed left ophthalmoplegia without facial hypesthesia. Visual acuity was normal. Laboratory studies showed raised ESR, 4+ glycosuria, and a blood sugar of 351mg/dl. Computerized tomography (CT) scan and left carotid angiography were considered normal. Left orbital venography showed no filling of the left cavernous sinus. Diabetic ophthalmoplegia was suspected by a neurologist. The patient was treated with insulin therapy, but visual acuity worsened, and hypesthesia was noted in the first and second divisions of the left trigeminal nerve. Subsequent CT scan demonstrated a high density lesion, which was homogeneously enhanced, in the left cavernous portion and the superior orbital fissure. The patient was presumed of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome, and prednine therapy (30mg/day) was started. On the second day after the administration of prednine, hypesthesia of the first and second division of the left trigeminal nerve improved. After 9 days of prednine therapy, the patient suddenly complained of severe headache, and lapsed into a coma. Massive hemorrhage with subarachnoid hemorrhage was recognized on the CT scan, with a marked midline shift to the right. The hematoma was immediately removed. A ruptured cerebral aneurysm was found at the bottom of the hematoma. The aneurysm was located in the distal portion of the left middle cerebral artery. Aneurysm clipping with external decompression and bilateral ventricular drainage was performed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A fungal aneurysm in a patient with presumed Tolosa-Hunt syndrome]. 185 58

The Tolosa-Hunt syndrome is a painful ophthalmoplegia in relation with a granulomatous lesion of the cavernous sinus of obscure etiology. The authors report 4 cases diagnosed at National Hospital of Niamey (Republic of Niger). They were 3 men and one woman. The unilateral retro-orbital cephalalgia was constant. Three patients had left oculomotor and abducens nerves' palsies and one only left trochlear nerve's palsy. In three cases the therapeutic efficacy of systemic corticosteroids was dramatic with complete remission of clinical signs. In a fourth case, chlorambucil was used with complete recovery.
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PMID:[Painful ophthalmoplegia of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 4 Nigerian cases]. 189 16

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.
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PMID:Steroid-responsive painful ophthalmoplegia in childhood: sphenoid sinusitis presenting as Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 195 78

The Tolosa-Hunt syndrome consists of painful ophthalmoplegia caused by cavernous sinus inflammation, which is responsive to steroid therapy. The MR features of 11 patients with the clinical diagnosis of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome were studied. Two patients had normal MR studies of the orbit and cavernous sinuses. In nine patients, abnormal signal and/or mass lesions were seen in the cavernous sinuses; in eight cases, the abnormality was hypointense relative to fat and isointense with muscle on short TR/TE images and isointense with fat on long TR/TE scans. Extension into the orbital apex was seen in eight cases. In six of nine cases the affected cavernous sinus was enlarged; in five of nine it had a convex outer margin. One patient had a thrombosed cavernous sinus and superior ophthalmic vein in addition to a cavernous sinus soft-tissue mass. The signal intensity of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome in this limited series was similar to that of orbital pseudotumor and is confined to a limited differential diagnosis, which includes meningioma, lymphoma, and sarcoidosis.
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PMID:MR imaging of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 210 3

A case of headaches with recurrent paralysis of cranial nerves III, IV, V and VI is reported. A good therapeutic effect was obtained with corticoids. After ruling out other diseases and causes of ophthalmoplegia the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome was diagnosed.
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PMID:[The Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Case report]. 213 35


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