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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (ophthalmoplegia)
3,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Total external ophthalmoplegia was observed in five patients consequent to the oral or intravenous administration of phenytoin. Coincident with the ophthalmoplegia, the state of consciousness varied from drowsiness to coma and the blood levels of phenytoin ranged from 36 to 55 mug per milliliter. Initially, the eyes were fixed in midposition, and oculocephalic and oculovestibular stimulation failed to evoke either horizontal or vertical eye movements. The return of vestibulo-ocular responsiveness lagged behind the return of consciousness and other reflex activity. The mechanism underlying this ophthalmoplegia may be related to the ability of phenytoin to potentiate inhibitory synapses in the vestibulo-oculomotor pathway which utilize gamma aminobutyric acid, and to increase the discharge rate of Purkinge cells which exert an inhibitory influence on the same structures.
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PMID:Phenytoin-induced ophthalmoplegia. 82 68

Acute enlargement of pituitary adenomas due to haemorrhage or ischaemic necrosis in the tumour was described as "pituitary apoplexy" by Brougham et al. in 1950. Since then, more than 200 cases have been reported, but--especially in the German literature--the syndrome has caught only little attention. Therefore, in a series of 12 own patients, typical findings and clinical characteristics are demonstrated and the literature is discussed. 9 patients had a haemorrhage into the tumour, 3 an acute ischaemic necrosis. The guiding symptom was the acute onset with ophthalmoplegia (11 of 12 patients). Only in one case the adenoma was known before the apoplexy. Other symptoms were headache, blurred vision, drowsiness and, in severe cases, hemiparesis, coma, and hypothalamic disorder. Most important is the acute endocrinological substitution with hydrocortisone; this may be life-saving. Neuroophthalmological recovery depends on early operation: cases of oculomotor palsy require an operation within the first 2 weeks after the acute event. An emergency operation is required only by an acute amaurosis. In general there will be enough time for careful clinical endocrinological and radiological investigations.
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PMID:[Acute hemorrhage and ischemic necroses in hypophyseal tumors: hypophyseal apoplexy]. 259 99

Wernicke encephalopathy is a disorder caused by a deficiency of thiamine which is a cofactor of several metabolic enzymes. The symptoms include mental confusion, ataxia, and ocular signs in adults, infants, and children. Patients often have somnolence and weakness combined with ophthalmoplegia. Alcoholics are the best known risk group; however, Wernicke encephalopathy occurs in poorly nourished patients of all ages. We present 2 children with malignant disease in whom Wernicke encephalopathy--an underdiagnosed and potentially fatal, but preventable and treatable disease--was diagnosed postmortem.
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PMID:Wernicke encephalopathy--a preventable cause of death: report of 2 children with malignant disease. 267 84

A new patient with Leigh's syndrome (subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy due to pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency) is presented. A Turkish boy of consanguinously married healthy parents developed progressive muscle weakness since infancy. At the age of 3 years he was unable to sit, stand or walk. Clinical examination showed general muscle weakness, hypotonia, muscle hypotrophy, bilateral ptosis, partial bilateral external ophthalmoplegia, nystagmus, intention tremor and hypoactive tendon reflexes. The EEG showed diffuse slowing, the cerebral CT scan disclosed mild hydrocephalus e vacuo. Motor nerve conduction velocity was slightly decreased, the EMG revealed signs of neuropathy. In the biopsied muscle only a mild hypotrophy of type 2 fibres was found, no abnormal mitochondria could be detected. The sural nerve was slightly abnormal: loss of large myelinated axons, loss of unmyelinated nerves. CSF protein was elevated to 80 mg/dl, protein electrophoresis revealed the pattern of markedly impaired blood-CSF barrier. Serum lactate and pyruvate were permanently elevated. In the urine the excretion of alanine was raised. The clinical state deteriorated during intercurrent infections; somnolence, vomiting and Cheyne-Stoke's respiration occurred. At the age of 3 1/2 years the child died of pneumonia. In the liver tissue a decreased activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was found. Neuropathological examination of the brain demonstrated wide-spread changes of Leigh's spongiform encephalopathy. Several enzyme deficiencies have hitherto been associated with Leigh's syndrome: This patients confirms earlier findings that a subgroup of Leigh's syndrome is caused by pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency.
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PMID:[Leigh's subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy due to decreased activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex]. 312 26

Two adolescent boys with Kearns-Sayre syndrome (progressive external ophthalmoplegia, heart block, elevated CSF protein, and ragged-red muscle fibers) developed lethargy, increasing somnolence, polydipsia, polyphagia, and polyuria after a brief course of steroid therapy. Both had hyperglycemia and acidosis. Nonketotic, lactic acidosis was present in one and ketosis in the other. Severe respiratory failure developed, and both patients died. Postmortem revealed fatty infiltration of the pancreas in addition to a diffuse spongiform encephalopathy.
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PMID:Fatal metabolic acidosis, hyperglycemia, and coma after steroid therapy for Kearns-Sayre syndrome. 370 1

We describe a patient with an isolated mesencephalic dorsal tegmental infarct affecting the oculomotor nuclear complex and medial longitudinal fasciculus, documented by high-resolution computed tomography, after undergoing percutaneous transluminal coronary artery angioplasty. Clinically, the patient exhibited bilateral ptosis, bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia, transient convergence retractory nystagmus, and minimal somnolence. We believe the combined clinical and radiological findings favor the presence of a caudal, dorsal, and paramedian embolic infarct in the territory of the paramedian branches of the mesencephalic artery as the most likely mechanism for these exceptional findings and correlate them with Warwick's scheme of the oculomotor subnuclei.
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PMID:Oculomotor nuclear complex infarction. Clinical and radiological correlation. 647 33

A case of a medial and caudal infarction of the midbrain in a 56 years old woman is reported. The clinical syndrome included a rapidly recovering sleepiness, an ophthalmoplegia related to damage to the caudal part of the oculomotor nuclear complex, a slow extrapyramidal dysarthria and a severe ataxia. The latter was characterized by the prevalent involvement of posture control, resulting from an axial hypotonia and the lack of balance reflexes. The CT scan showed a low density area in the central part of the midbrain. Electrophysiological investigations were carried out to study the impairment of the sensory and auditory tracts in the brainstem. In spite of the gravity of initial signs, recovery was good and the patient led a normal life 8 months later.
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PMID:[Regressing median peduncular infarction]. 669 25

A 17-year-old girl was admitted to our hospital because of drowsiness, diplopia and gait difficulty. She had been well until ten days before admission when fever, drowsiness, headache and general fatigue developed. On admission, there were drowsiness, ophthalmoplegia, ataxia and hyporeflexia. CSF cells and anti-CMV antibody titers increased. CMV-DNA was detected in the CSF by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Serum anti-GQ1b antibody was positive. During recovery, forced laughing temporarily appeared. The neurological symptoms disappeared completely. CSF anti-CMV antibody titers became normalized and CSF CMV-DNA-PCR became negative. This is the first case report of Bickerstaff's brainstem encephalitis associated with CMV infection.
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PMID:[Bickerstaff's brainstem encephalitis associated with cytomegalovirus infection]. 802 40

Bilateral ophthalmoplegia may be an unusual sign of vertebrobasilar ischemia. We report the cases of two patients (75 and 73 years old), who suddenly developed drowsiness, bilateral ophthalmoplegia with bilateral ptosis and mild right hemiparesis. In both patients, MRI revealed bilateral thalamic and midbrain infarcts, ECG showed the presence of atrial fibrillation and Doppler study of the extracranial and intracranial vertebral arteries found no significant alterations. Ischemia involving the midbrain and thalamic paramedian regions may cause bilateral ophthalmoplegia and consciousness disturbances. In these two cases, the most plausible etiologic mechanism was cardiac embolism, and the prognosis for bilateral ocular palsy was poor.
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PMID:Bilateral ophthalmoplegia: an unusual sign of the top of the basilar artery syndrome. 891 63

A 29-year-old man developed drowsiness, ophthalmoplegia and cerebellar ataxia following upper respiratory tract infection. We diagnosed the patient as having a Bickerstaff's brainstem encephalitis. There was upbeating nystagmus which appeared with upward gaze, and bilateral horizontal gaze-evoked nystagmus in both directions. On electronystagmography, eye-tracking test showed saccadic pattern with impaired smooth pursuit eye movement. The horizontal optokinetic nystagmus test showed diminution of response. These results suggested that brainstem and cerebellum were widely involved. Presence of nystagmus may help to speculate the lesion of Bickerstaff's brainstem encephalitis.
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PMID:[Bickerstaff's brainstem encephalitis associated with nystagmus]. 974 79


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