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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We examined visual evoked potentials and pattern electroretinograms in a patient with
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
associated with optic nerve involvement. The 82-year-old woman developed unilateral painful
ophthalmoplegia
and visual loss in the right eye. Magnetic resonance imaging showed an abnormal soft-tissue area in the right cavernous sinus and the right orbital apex. Symptoms responded rapidly to treatment with corticosteroid. Visual evoked potentials to flash and pattern stimuli were both remarkably reduced and delayed in the right eye in the acute stage; however they improved to almost normal after steroid therapy. The pattern electroretinogram recorded in the acute stage was normal bilaterally. These results indicate that optic nerve involvement in
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
can be mild and reversible.
...
PMID:Steroid-responsive optic neuropathy in a patient with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome: electrophysiologic findings. 947
The incidence, pathophysiology, symptoms, differential diagnosis and treatment of ophthalmoplegic and retinal migraines are reviewed. We describe three cases: one recurrent, painful
ophthalmoplegia
alternating between the III and VI nerves, one recurrent migraine associated with internal
ophthalmoplegia
, and one migraine with visual aura and retinal infarction. In our review we emphasize their infrequency (ophthalmoplegic migraine, 0.7 per million; retinal migraine 0.5-7% of migraines with aura), their uncertain pathophysiology and the possibility of causing permanent oculomotor or visual deficits. Differential diagnoses, including all causes of painful
ophthalmoplegia
and amaurosis fugax are discussed, with special attention to the difficulty of differentiating
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
and forms without headache.
...
PMID:[Ophthalmoplegic and retinal migraines]. 964 38
Pseudotumor, Graves' disease, and lymphoproliferative disease are the most common ophthalmologic disease entities requiring evaluation by CT and MR imaging. A history of acute onset, pain, swelling, proptosis, and response to steroids are the classical findings. The radiologic findings are categorized according to location into dacryoadenitis, myositis, and sclerouveitis, with and without associated infiltrations. The inflammatory infiltrate, which is composed of polymorphic leukocytes, lymphocytes, and plasma cells interspersed with a variable amount of fibrovascular tissue, may be diffuse or localized. The preferred radiologic method used for assessment of pseudotumor is CT. MR imaging, however, is indicated for evaluation of the
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
, which is characterized by an inflammatory infiltrate in the orbital apex and cavernous sinus leading to cranial nerve involvement with
ophthalmoplegia
. The clinical and radiologic constellation of findings allows a definitive diagnosis in most cases.
...
PMID:Pseudotumor of the orbit. Clinical, pathologic, and radiologic evaluation. 1002 35
A 23-year-old woman was admitted with headache, nausea, vomiting and blurred vision on the left side. Neurological examination showed ptosis with a complete internal and external
ophthalmoplegia
and a red fullness around the left orbita. Computed tomographic scanning of the brain revealed no abnormalities. As she improved on high doses of steroids a diagnosis of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
(THS) seemed to be indicated. However, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a lesion with intermediate signal intensity in the left cavernous sinus. Craniotomy was performed when symptoms of THS recurred. Histopathological examination revealed a meningioma with a papillary aspect and some mitoses. This case illustrates that: (1) THS is still a diagnosis by exclusion; (2) MRI and histopathological examination are important if there is any doubt about the diagnosis; and (3) also when there is no doubt, improvement after steroid therapy may be a diagnostic pitfall. Therefore, not only MRI but also orbital phlebography and angiography should seriously be considered.
...
PMID:Meningioma presenting as Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 1035 Jan 98
A 47-year-old woman presented with severe neutropenia accompanied by diplopia and orbital pain. Her bone marrow was normal except for the absence of segmented neutrophils. Because the administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) at a dose of 1 microgram/kg/day was not sufficiently effective and neutropenia developed, the patient was admitted to our hospital. Physical examination revealed painful
ophthalmoplegia
and hypoalgesia in the first region of trigeminal nerve, suggestive of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
. Severe neutropenia was observed in both peripheral blood and bone marrow, together with mild anemia and thrombocytopenia. The life span of red cells and platelets was shortened. High PAIgG levels, a positive Coombs test, and a positive test for anti-NA1 antibody suggested that blood cells were being destroyed by an autoimmune mechanism. Corticosteroid hormone therapy preceded by the administration of G-CSF at 5 micrograms/kg/day was effective for both neutropenia and in improving the patient's neurological findings.
...
PMID:[Autoimmune neutropenia accompanied by Tolosa-Hunt syndrome]. 1062 27
Ten patients (6F, 4M) with recurrent
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
are reported. Besides ocular motor symptoms, one patient had trigeminal nerve involvement, one had ipsilateral ocular sympathicoplegia with miosis and ptosis, and one tinnitus during an episode of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
, ipsilateral to the pain side. One patient had Bell's palsy, one had a possible Raeder's syndrome, and one had a period of tinnitus between the
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
episodes. Three of the 10 patients reported periods of periocular pain without
ophthalmoplegia
between the Tolosa-Hunt episodes, the pain located ipsilateral to the ophthalmoplegic side in the Tolosa-Hunt episodes. Systemic symptoms associated with
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
, e.g., back pain, chronic fatigue, arthralgia, gut problems among others, occurred with the same frequency in these 10 patients as in an earlier report. Seventy per cent of the patients had signs of inflammation in serum during a period of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
. Orbital phlebograms showed pathologic signs in four of the five patients investigated during a Tolosa-Hunt period. One phlebogram was normal in a sixth patient when performed during a period of unilateral periocular pain without ophthalmolegia. Magnetic resonance imaging of the head (with contrast) was only performed in three patients during the Tolosa-Hunt period: one showed signs of inflammation in the middle fossa and two were normal. In one of the patients with normal magnetic resonance imaging, the orbital phlebogram was pathologic. Steroid treatment promptly relieved the pain in all patients.
...
PMID:Recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome: a report of ten new cases. 1066 17
Experience with modern neuroimaging techniques, computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, in the diagnosis of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
(THS) is reviewed. Conventional CT scan remains normal in about two-thirds of these patients. In the reported 22 patients meeting the IHS criteria for a THS diagnosis on whom an MRI study was performed, MRI revealed a convex enlargement of the symptomatic cavernous sinus by an abnormal tissue isointense with gray matter on short TR/TE images and isohypointense on long TR/TE images. This abnormal tissue markedly increases in signal intensity after contrast injection. MRI seems also to be the ideal technique to follow progressive resolution of the abnormal tissue after steroids. Therefore, normal MRI would probably exclude THS, whereas in the appropriate clinical setting of steroid-responsive painful
ophthalmoplegia
, MRI showing the cavernous sinus abnormality described here suggests a diagnosis of THS. From these data, we propose that the fourth IHS criterion for THS diagnosis, "Exclusion of other causative lesions by neuroimaging and (not compulsory) carotid angiogram" should be changed to "Finding by MRI of specific cavernous sinus abnormalities (with the characteristics described herein) which slowly resolve with steroid treatment".
...
PMID:Tolosa-Hunt syndrome: focus on MRI diagnosis. 1066 18
The
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
consists of a painful
ophthalmoplegia
related to a granulomatous inflammatory process in the cavernous sinus, which may be documented by cerebral magnetic resonance imaging with gadolinium enhancement. Two cases of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
preceded by facial palsy observed in 1998 at the Department of Neurosurgery of the Second University of Naples are presented here. Both patients developed
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
following an ipsilateral facial palsy that resolved in about 15 days with medical treatment. Cerebral magnetic resonance imaging with gadolinium enhancement showed, in both cases, inflammatory tissue in the cavernous sinus. The patients underwent corticosteroid therapy (prednisolone, 80 mg per day, intravenously) with pain regression. In the first case, the patient experienced recurrence of the syndrome that was definitively resolved with further corticosteroid treatment. The rare reports of facial palsy in patients with
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
suggest the inclusion of this disease in the so-called multiple cranial nerve palsy syndrome. It is probable that
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
has an inflammatory pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Tolosa-Hunt syndrome preceded by facial palsy. 1084 35
Painful ophthalmoplegia in childhood has different causes. One is
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
, in which a first episode may be difficult to diagnose because of its clinical similarity to ophthalmoplegic migraine. A 10-year-old male with painful
ophthalmoplegia
and a cavernous sinus inflammation associated with an intracavernous carotid stenosis demonstrated by magnetic resonance imaging and angiography is reported. These findings resolved in follow-up imaging. This report suggests that in the presence of painful
ophthalmoplegia
, magnetic resonance imaging detection of cavernous sinus inflammation can facilitate the diagnosis of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
when other causes are excluded.
...
PMID:Painful ophthalmoplegia with reversible carotid stenosis in a child. 1137 11
The authors report the successful treatment of a 42-year-old man who suffered from recurrent painful
ophthalmoplegia
caused by bilateral cavernous sinus (CS) actinomycosis. A presumptive diagnosis of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
was made when he presented with left painful
ophthalmoplegia
. Recurrent
ophthalmoplegia
on the opposite side when steroid medications were tapered led to repeated imaging and a pterional craniotomy and biopsy sampling of the CS. These tests demonstrated acute inflammation and sulfur granules, which responded clinically and radiologically to parenterally administered penicillin therapy. Actinomycosis may present as a painful
ophthalmoplegia
with involvement of one or both CSs. Repeated imaging and possibly surgical exploration may be necessary to make a definitive diagnosis.
...
PMID:Bilateral cavernous sinus actinomycosis resulting in painful ophthalmoplegia. Case report. 1188 47
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