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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The parasellar compartments are located lateral to and on either side of the sella turcica. The cavernous sinuses are the most prominent anatomic feature of the parasella. Each sinus consists of a plexus of veins through which runs the intracavernous portion of the internal carotid artery. Ocular motor nerves three and four travel within the dural covering of the cavernous sinus to the superior orbital fissure, and cranial nerve six travels through the carotid sinus itself, giving rise to parasellar syndromes, which have distinctive clinical features.
Ophthalmoplegia
occurs as a result of damage to these ocular motor nerves and variable involvement of oculosympathetic nerves. Facial pain, dysesthesia, and paraesthesia are caused by damage to one or more of the divisions of the fifth cranial nerve, travelling in the dural wall of the cavernous sinus. Tumors, such as meningiomas, frequently cause parasellar syndromes, as do aneurysms of the intracavernous portion of the internal carotid artery, carotid-cavernous fistulas, and cavernous sinus thrombosis. Inflammatory conditions such as
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
, ischemia to small vessels supplying the cavernous portion of the cranial nerves, and infections can cause this syndrome. Magnetic resonance imaging is the investigation of choice and therapy is specific to the cause of the parasellar syndrome, but now includes more aggressive endoscopic and microsurgical intervention, and radiosurgery.
...
PMID:Parasellar syndromes. 1216 23
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
(THS) is characterized by painful
ophthalmoplegia
due to a granulomatous inflammation in the cavernous sinus. Corticosteroid therapy dramatically resolves both the clinical and radiological findings of THS. We present MRI findings of six patients with a clinical history of at least one episode of unilateral or bilateral orbital-periorbital pain, clinical findings of associated paresis of one or more of 3rd, 4th, 5th or 6th cranial nerves. All of the patients revealed an enlargement of the symptomatic cavernous sinus on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. Five patients revealed total resolution of the clinical findings within 1-8 weeks, following systemic corticosteroid treatment. One patient revealed only minor regression of clinical findings within 2 weeks after the initiation of the treatment, so the cavernous sinus lesion was reevaluated as meningioma on MRI, and the patient underwent surgical resection of the mass with resultant histopathological finding of cavernous sinus meningioma. A follow-up MRI scan was performed for five patients at the end of 8-weeks of steroid therapy. Three of these five patients showed total resolution of the cavernous sinus lesions whereas two of them revealed a partial regression of the cavernous sinus lesions. MRI findings before and after systemic corticosteroid therapy are important diagnostic criteria to put the definitive diagnosis of THS and to differentiate it from other cavernous sinus lesions that simulate THS both clinically and radiologically.
...
PMID:MRI findings in Tolosa-Hunt syndrome before and after systemic corticosteroid therapy. 1253 85
Besides painful
ophthalmoplegia
, patients suffering from
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
often present increasing loss of visual perception. The impairment of the optic nerve leads to a delay of the VEP (visual evoked potentials) responses. Using the method of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), some patients present unspecific alterations in the vicinity of the optic nerve. However, both methods (VEP and MRI) are unsuitable to assess the effect of an impaired optic nerve function on neuronal processing in the visual cortex. We report one patient suffering from
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
affecting the optic nerve. We used fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) to show how this impairment of the optic nerve alters cortical processing of visual information. The activity of the unaffected visual cortex was bilaterally reduced when compared to healthy volunteers but greater that obtained from patients suffering from bilateral occipital infarction. Our results offer new opportunities to assess the efficiency of therapy in patients with increasing loss of visual perception due to the
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
. Further studies are necessary to investigate, whether fMRI also provides the possibility to assess the efficiency of drug therapy on optic nerve function.
...
PMID:[Visual cortex in the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Functional imaging for the detection of a psychogenic disorder--a case report]. 1520 18
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
is characterized by a dull, persistent pain around the affected eye,
ophthalmoplegia
and, sometimes, involvement of other cranial nerves passing through the cavernous sinus. Corticosteroid administration is valuable in the treatment and frequently has a dramatic effect. We report a boy with
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
who fails to respond to the initial steroid treatment. The role of the MRI in the management of this condition is discussed.
...
PMID:Paediatric Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 1522 76
Painful ophthalmoplegia is an important presenting complaint to emergency departments, ophthalmologists, and neurologists. The etiological differential diagnosis of painful
ophthalmoplegia
is extensive and consists of numerous sinister etiologies including vascular (eg, aneurysm, carotid dissection, carotid-cavernous fistula), neoplasms (eg, primary intracranial tumors, local or distant metastases), inflammatory conditions (eg, orbital pseudotumor, sarcoidosis,
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
), infectious etiologies (eg, fungal, mycobacterial), and other conditions (eg, microvascular infarcts secondary to diabetes, ophthalmoplegic migraine, giant cell arteritis). A systematic approach to the evaluation of painful
ophthalmoplegia
can lead to prompt recognition of serious disorders that if left untreated, can be associated with significant morbidity or mortality. Inflammatory conditions such as
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
and orbital pseudotumor are highly responsive to corticosteroids, but should be diagnoses of exclusion.
...
PMID:Painful ophthalmoplegia: overview with a focus on Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 1522 94
Ophthalmoplegic migraine is a rare syndrome in which headache is associated with
ophthalmoplegia
and third, fourth or sixth cranial nerves palsy. It occurs most frequently in childhood and teenagers. At magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with gadolinium (GD-DTPA) it may be observed a transitory enhancement of the affected nerve. We present the case of a male teenager, 16 years old, with typical medical history and enhanced signal at left oculomotor nerve in cisternal portion at MRI weighted in T1 with GD-DTPA. On the control exam, eighteen months later, there was no remarkable lesion. The enhancement of oculomotor nerve at MRI is always pathological and among the differential diagnosis we must include: neoplasia (lymphoma and leukemia), infections (AIDS, syphilis), inflammatory process (sarcoidose and
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
) and vascular (posterior communicating artery aneurysm).
...
PMID:[Ophthalmoplegic migraine: MRI findings. Case report]. 1583 88
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
is an entity of rare occurrence and unknown etiopathogenesis, expressed clinically by unilateral orbitary pain associated with simple or multiple
oculomotor paralysis
, which resolves spontaneously but may recur. We present a series of six cases taken care in our ambulatory, which fulfill the diagnostic criteria for Tolosa Hunt syndrome according to the International Headache Society Classification of 2004. There are also emphasized the demographic data of this series of patients, their 12 months follow-up, investigative studies and responsiveness to corticosteroids. As the diagnosis is always of exclusion, literature revision is focused on differential diagnosis of painful ophthalmoplegic syndromes.
...
PMID:[Tolosa-Hunt syndrome: analysis of six cases]. 1617 16
In children with painful
ophthalmoplegia
, the diagnosis of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
or of ophthalmoplegic migraine should only be considered when tumoral, infectious, inflammatory or vascular causes have been excluded by appropriate investigations. Both entities are classified as "neuralgia" by the International Headache Society, and seem to share a similar pathogenic mechanism. Both diseases have many clinical similarities with slight differences concerning pain characteristics or ocular associated symptoms. High resolution CT scan or contrast enhanced MRI can be necessary to exclude other causes of painful
ophthalmoplegia
. They can sometimes objectify an inflammatory process of the cavernous sinus in
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
or a reversible enhancement and thickening of the cisternal segment of the oculomotor nerve during an ophthalmoplegic migraine. Pain and
ophthalmoplegia
quickly resolve with corticosteroids. Such treatment may decrease the risk of recurrence. It is important to follow-up these patients for a 2 years period and to repeat the etiologic assessment. We report here 2 cases of children with painful ophtalmoplegia.
...
PMID:[Painful ophthalmoplegia in children: Tolosa-Hunt syndrome or ophthalmoplegic migraine?]. 1745 15
The differential diagnosis of painful
ophthalmoplegia
is extensive and consists of numerous sinister etiologies, including neoplasms (ie, primary intracranial tumors, local or distant metastases), vascular (eg, aneurysm, carotid dissection, and carotid-cavernous fistula), inflammatory (ie, orbital pseudotumor, giant cell arteritis, sarcoidosis, and
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
), and infectious etiologies (ie, fungal and mycobacterial), as well as other miscellaneous conditions (ie, ophthalmoplegic migraine and microvascular infarcts secondary to diabetes). A systematic approach to the evaluation of painful
ophthalmoplegia
can lead to prompt recognition of serious disorders that can be associated with significant morbidity or mortality if left untreated. Inflammatory conditions such as
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
and orbital pseudotumor are highly responsive to corticosteroids but should be diagnoses of exclusion.
...
PMID:An approach to the patient with painful ophthalmoplegia, with a focus on Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 1768 98
Tolosa Hunt syndrome is a rare disorder caused by nonspecific inflammation in the cavernous sinus/superior orbital fissure and/or orbital apex. It is clinically characterized by alternating remissions and exacerbations, and manifested as diplopia associated with unilateral periorbital hemicranial headache. The symptoms include blepharoptosis, which is usually mild if present, bulbomotor paresis involving the pupil, and loss of sensation in the area supplied by the first division of the trigeminal nerve. Therapy for
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
are systemic steroids. The course of disease in a 25-year-old man hospitalized for painful
ophthalmoplegia
and diplopia is presented. The history included severe pain on rightward eye movement and parabulbarly on the right, considerable defect in the area supplied by the first division of the trigeminal nerve, right hemicrania, and diplopia on looking to the left, right, upward and downward that developed after four days. A month before, the patient was observed at neurology department for severe right hemicrania. Current status included severe pain parabulbarly on the right, discrete proptosis with mild ptosis on the right eye, restricted right eye bulbar motoricity on looking nasally, nasally upward and downward, and loss of sensation in the area supplied by the first division of the trigeminal nerve. Pupilar motoricity was normal. Upon admission, neuroradiologic examination (orbit CT) and brain MR were performed, and therapy with systemic corticosteroids was initiated ex iuvantibus, in consultation with a neurologist. At 24 hours of corticosteroid therapy, the pain subsided, whereas diplopia disappeared almost completely after 5 days, now being only occasionally recorded on looking to the left and upward.
...
PMID:[Painful ophthalmoplegia--Tolosa-Hunt syndrome]. 1804 75
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