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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Graves' ophthalmopathy
(GO) is a specific immune-mediated disorder, whose treatment is sometimes difficult. In order to investigate the efficacy of intravenous methylprednisolone (MP) pulse therapy in GO, we studied eight patients with GO, followed up for at least 6 months by clinical patient self-assessment, ophthalmological examination and orbital computed tomography (OCT). A 12.5 mg/kg dose of MP was administered intravenously over a 10 hour period, once every month. Three to six MP pulse administrations were performed in each patient. All patients were outpatients. A 0.5 mg/kg/day oral prednisone dose was given to each patient as interpulse therapy. Clinical assessment of MP pulse therapy showed a good response in 87.5% and no response in 12.5% of patients. The treatment was rapidly efficient, mostly on patient self-assessment, soft tissue inflammation,
ophthalmoplegia
, corneal involvement, visual acuity and extraocular muscle enlargement on OCT. Post-treatment ophthalmic index was significantly improved (6.75 +/- 3.06 vs. 2.5 +/- 1.41: p < 0.05). MP pulse therapy had less effect on proptosis (22.94 +/- 2.32 mm vs. 21.56 +/- 2.22 mm: p < 0.05). No adverse effects were noted with MP pulse therapy. Patients showed no relapse of eye involvement during a mean follow up of 31.8 months (2-77 months). In conclusion, our results suggest that intravenous MP pulse therapy is a good immunosuppressive therapy for GO. Moreover, in comparison with the previous studies, the MP dose used in our present study appears to be optimal with high efficacy. MP pulse therapy represents a safe and efficient treatment in GO, which can easily be performed in outpatients.
...
PMID:Intravenous methylprednisolone pulse therapy in the treatment of Graves' ophthalmopathy. 954 92
Dysthyroid orbitopathy
(DO) is an autoimmune disorder usually associated with Graves' disease. The extra-ocular muscles are the target of the autoimmune attack. As a result, they become enlarged, producing restrictive
ophthalmoplegia
and proptosis. Other cardinal signs of DO include upper eyelid retraction and lag, conjunctival injection and chemosis, and periorbital edema. Visual loss may occur if the enlarged extra-ocular muscles compress the optic nerve in the orbital apex. These cardinal signs may mimic neurological conditions, including Parinaud's syndrome, sixth nerve palsy, carotid-cavernous fistula, and spheno-orbital meningioma. Treatment is directed at the cardinal signs and is largely palliative. Under certain clinical conditions, judicious use of corticosteroids, radiation therapy, or surgery designed to decompress the orbit, correct strabismus, or restore normal lid position may help to restore visual function.
...
PMID:Dysthyroid orbitopathy. 1087 76
It has been hypothesized that the distinct anatomic localization of the Graves' triad may be partially explained by pressure and trauma. While there are reports of local trauma clearly contributing to the pathogenesis of pretibial myxedema, direct evidence for a similar mechanism in
Graves' ophthalmopathy
(GO) has been lacking. We describe a 65-year-old male patient with stable mild
Graves' ophthalmopathy
of 24 years' duration in whom a retrobulbar block was administered prior to cataract removal. Three weeks after the procedure, he complained of rapidly progressive bilateral diplopia. In 6 months, there was moderate exophthalmos, exposure keratitis, almost complete
ophthalmoplegia
, and decreasing visual acuity requiring surgical decompression. Postdecompression, inflammatory signs and vision improved but there was complete
ophthalmoplegia
. The eye signs remained unchanged for the next 4 months but there was exacerbation of the disease within a week of receiving radioiodine despite concomitant steroid administration. Orbital irradiation was finally administered with rapid improvement in extraocular eye muscle function. We hypothesize that local inflammatory and immune responses stimulated by trauma and/or pressure in the retrobulbar compartment, triggered the development of severe ophthalmopathy in this patient. Thyroid-stimulating immunoglobulin (TSI) levels remained markedly elevated despite the clinical improvement suggesting that the beneficial effects of radiotherapy in this case were not mediated by suppressing TSI production.
...
PMID:Severe Graves' ophthalmopathy after retrobulbar anesthesia for cataract extraction in a patient with mild stable thyroid eye disease. 1455 26
We report a 71-year-old woman with concomitant ocular myasthenia gravis and euthyroid
Graves' ophthalmopathy
. Unilateral
ophthalmoplegia
, including ptosis, initially was responsive to edrophonium and corticosteroids, except for diplopia on upward gaze, but refractory swelling of the inferior rectus muscle and proptosis followed. Autoantibodies to acetylcholine and thyrotropin receptors were detected. Her ophthalmopathy abated after orbital irradiation in combination with systemic steroids. There may be an immunological basis for the association of ocular myasthenia gravis with euthyroid
Graves' ophthalmopathy
.
...
PMID:Ocular myasthenia gravis associated with euthyroid ophthalmopathy. 1463 94
While skeletal muscles generally perform specific limited roles, extraocular muscles (EOMs) have to be responsive over a wider dynamic range. As a result, EOMs have fundamentally distinct structural, functional, biochemical and immunological properties compared to other skeletal muscles. While these properties enable high fatigue resistance and the rapid and precise control of extraocular motility, they might also explain why EOMs are selectively involved in certain disorders, such as chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
(CPEO), myasthenia gravis and
Graves' ophthalmopathy
. This review first gives an overview of the novel myofibre classification in EOMs and then focuses on those properties that might explain why
ophthalmoplegia
should be so prominent in these disorders.
...
PMID:Extraocular muscles have fundamentally distinct properties that make them selectively vulnerable to certain disorders. 1563 16
We report a 53-year-old woman with severe
Graves' ophthalmopathy
accompanied by uncontrolled myasthenia gravis. She presented remarkable exophthalmos, chemosis, and restriction of eye movement. Despite plasma exchange, steroid pulse therapy, local injection of steroid, and irradiation, ocular symptoms did not ameliorate. Since optic neuropathy was seen, orbital decompression surgery was performed in the left eye. Bilateral chemosis was improved after the surgery. Five years after surgery, there was no ocular palsy in the operated left eye, but in the contralateral eye. For the good prognosis of the eye movement, orbital decompression might be recommended in the severe
Graves' ophthalmopathy
accompanied by the optic neuropathy and/or
ophthalmoplegia
with proptosis.
...
PMID:[Severe Graves' ophthalmopathy accompanied by myasthenia gravis]. 1676 93
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