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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:Recurrent Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 155 57
Machado-Joseph disease (MJD) is an autosomal dominantly inherited neurodegenerative disorder characterized by varying age of onset and pronounced phenotypic heterogeneity. The clinical core features include gait ataxia, external
ophthalmoplegia
, nystagmus, and bulging eyes. Recently, Kawagushi et al. (1994) cloned the MJD1 gene on chromosome 14 and MJD turned out to be the fifth neurodegenerative disease caused by an unstable CAG repeat expansion. We have studied two large Danish families and one Norwegian family with MJD. Three features not previously associated with MJD are reported: dementia, generalized muscle and
joint pain
, and in one case neuropathological examination revealed atrophy of the inferior olives. We found a significant inverse correlation between age of onset and the length of the CAG repeat expansion, and anticipation is described through four succeeding generations. Instability of the CAG repeat expansion was most pronounced at paternal transmission.
...
PMID:Machado-Joseph disease in three Scandinavian families. 958 50
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
Whipple's disease is a rare chronic multi-systemic infectious disorder caused by the Gram-positive bacillus, Tropheryma whippelii. Infection may involve any organ in the body, and most commonly affects white men in the fourth to sixth decades of life. The most common presenting symptoms are gastrointestinal and include abdominal pain, diarrhoea, anorexia and associated weight loss. However, the variability in presentation is considerable and some patients may present with intermittent low-grade fever, neurological abnormalities (nystagmus,
ophthalmoplegia
, cranial nerve defects), migratory
arthralgia
, lymphadenopathy, or involvement of the cardiovascular system. In typical Whipple's disease, the most severe changes are seen in the proximal small intestine and biopsy reveals mucosal and lymph node infiltration with large, foamy histocytes, containing granules that stain positive with periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) reagent and represent intact or partially degraded bacteria. Extended antibiotic treatment (up to 1-year) is indicated. Life-long surveillance for recurrence is essential, once primary treatment has been completed. We report the case of a 58-year-old man who developed a rare infection with the actinobacterium, T. whippelii. The patient had suffered intermittent episodes of varying clinical symptoms associated with multiple hospital admissions and clinical diagnoses, spanning a period of 22 years. Historically,
arthralgia
was the primary manifestation in this patient and also was the chief complaint for which he was first hospitalized 22 years ago. At his most recent admission to our hospital department, his presenting symptoms were persistent fatigue, weight loss,
arthralgia
and diarrhoea. Thus, it is essential that clinicians retain a high index of suspicion for T. whippelii infection in patients who have a long-term history of arthritis, fever and diarrhoea.
...
PMID:Whipple's disease: multiple hospital admissions of a man with diarrhoea, fever and arthralgia. 1603 47
Miller-Fisher syndrome (MFS) typically presents with
ophthalmoplegia
, ataxia, and areflexia. Atypical MFS additionally includes bulbar impairment, affection of the limbs, or abortive presentations. Mostly, MFS follows an infection with Campylobacter jejunii. Aspergilloma has not been reported to trigger MFS. In a 48-year-old male tiredness, tinnitus, otalgia, parietal hyperaesthesia, coughing, plugged nose, hypoacusis, globus sensation, epipharyngeal pain, dysarthria, hypogeusia,
arthralgia
, lid cloni, facial hypaesthesia and tooth ache consecutively developed. There were occasional lid cloni, left-sided facial hypaesthesia, reduced gag reflex, divesting soft palate, and absent tendon reflexes. CSF investigations revealed normal cell-count but increased protein. Antibodies against GM1 and GQ1b were negative. Atypical MFS was diagnosed. Otolaryngological examinations revealed chronic sinusitis maxillaris from an aspergilloma. After immunoglobulins and resectioning of the aspergilloma, neurological abnormalities disappeared within 19d. MFS may manifest as unilateral lower cranial nerve lesions without affection of the upper cranial nerves or ataxia. Atypical MFS may be triggered by parasinusoidal aspergilloma.
...
PMID:Anti-GQ1b-negative Miller-Fisher syndrome with lower cranial nerve involvement from parasinusoidal aspergilloma. 1608 Nov 59