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

A case of painful ophthalmoplegia due to idiopathic granulomatous involvement of the superior orbital fissure (Tolosa-Hunt syndrome) is described. The clinical features of recurrent pain, ocular motor nerve palsies and proptosis correlated well with the eventual demonstration of an enhancing mass in the region of the cavernous sinus. Removal of the lesion led to a resolution of the clinical picture and demonstration of a non-caseating granuloma with no other detectable cause. The original observation of Tolosa was thus re-affirmed.
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PMID:Clinicopathological correlation in a case of painful ophthalmoplegia: Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 259 72

A medical history of a 46-year-old male is reported. At 23 years of age, he started having diffuse pain in the left side of his head for up to 30 min once or twice a month. At 28, the pain changed into left-sided cluster headache-like attacks with 2-3 h duration and with ipsilateral conjunctival injection, lacrimation, and rhinnorhea, but with short-lasting free intervals of about two to three weeks. At 36, the pattern of the attacks corresponded to chronic migrainous neuralgia. At 40, the symptoms changed to painful ophthalmoplegia-picture. A left-sided parasellar meningioma was then diagnosed. Removal of the tumor caused complete amelioration. The case history is suggested to support the hypothesis that the cavernous sinus region is involved in cluster headache.
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PMID:A case of parasellar meningioma mimicking cluster headache. 261 84

Six cases of internal ophthalmoplegia due to direct head injury are presented. All six patients had a dilated, nonreactive pupil. Four had no extraocular palsies or ptosis and two had partial extraocular palsies or ptosis. Disturbance of consciousness was absent or very mild, and all patients fully recovered within 1 to 7 days after the traumatic event. No patient had a history that suggested a cause for oculomotor nerve palsy, and emergency CTscans showed no mass lesions. The internal ophthalmoplegia was recognized immediately after trauma. Although minimal oculomotor nerve palsies due to unruptured intracranial aneurysms have been described, none of our patients complained of periorbital or retroorbital pain either before or after the trauma, which rules out intracranial aneurysms as the cause of the internal ophthalmoplegia. Therefore, we concluded that the internal ophthalmoplegia was due to direct head injury. The pathophysiological mechanism of the internal ophthalmoplegia appeared to be slight injury of the pupillomotor fibres on the ventromedial surface of the third nerve at the posterior petroclinoid ligament, which acted as the fulcrum due to the downward displacement of the brainstem at the time of impact.
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PMID:Primary internal ophthalmoplegia due to head injury. 271 3

A 50-year-old woman developed third, fourth, and fifth cranial nerve palsies in the right associated with frontal pain in the ipsilateral side. Oral administration of prednisolone (30 mg/day) was initiated. The painful ophthalmoplegia improved dramatically following this treatment. Three months later, the patient developed the third, fourth, and fifth cranial palsies in the left which was contralateral to the previous episode. The patient had pain in the left frontal region. The corticosteroid therapy was again effective. Cavernous sinus and orbital venographies demonstrated a constriction of the right superior ophthalmic vein in the first and third parts, with a partial filling of the cavernous sinus. The left superior vein and cavernous sinus were normal. A left carotid arteriogram showed a slight deformity of the carotid siphon in the left. The glucose tolerance test demonstrated a mild diabetic pattern. Diabetic ophthalmoplegia can also be suspected in this case, however, the finding of a partial filling of the right cavernous sinus was indicative of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Therefore this case was diagnosed as Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Alternating relapsing Tolosa-Hunt syndrome involving the third, fourth and fifth cranial nerve as seen in this case is very rare. There are many diseases which may demonstrate similar symptoms; i.e. parasellar tumor, aneurysm, diabetic ophthalmoplegia, multiple cranial neuropathy, etc. The pathologic process involved in Tolosa-Hunt syndrome is poorly understood and it appears that the clinical entity of this syndrome should be questioned. We believe that it is necessary to clarify the precise pathologic process involved in this syndrome and its relation with other similar syndromes exhibiting similar symptoms.
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PMID:[A case of alternating Tolosa-Hunt syndrome]. 275 59

We review our recent experience with occlusion of the cervical internal carotid artery (ICA) in 15 patients with symptomatic aneurysms of the cavernous segment. All the patients were women and ranged in age from 38 to 74 years. Ten patients sought treatment initially for ophthalmoplegia, 9 for retro-orbital pain, 8 for facial paresthesia, and 3 for loss of vision. Two patients had symptoms of transient ocular or brain ischemia. The diameter of the aneurysm was greater than 3 cm in 10 patients. Ten patients underwent gradual occlusion of the ICA by Selverstone clamp under anticoagulation and monitoring of neurological status. One patient underwent ligation of a severely stenotic ICA under general anesthesia and electroencephalographic monitoring. Four patients underwent trapping of the aneurysm (after attempts at direct obliteration) under electroencephalographic and cerebral blood flow monitoring. Two patients with incompetent circle of Willis collaterals underwent prophylactic superficial temporal artery to middle cerebral artery bypass surgery prior to ICA occlusion. There was no postoperative clinical change in 9 patients. Ophthalmoplegia improved in 2 patients, and facial pain improved in 3. Three patients developed new extraocular muscle palsies within hours of ICA occlusion; these resolved in all patients by 1 week postoperatively. No change in aneurysm size was documented by serial postoperative computed tomographic or magnetic resonance imaging scans. After a follow-up of 5 to 6 years (range, 6 months-9 years), 11 patients have remained neurologically stable. Two patients experienced delayed transient worsening of visual or facial symptoms.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Internal carotid artery occlusion for cavernous segment aneurysm. 277 Oct 11

Sixty-three patients with third cranial nerve palsies (CNPs), either isolated (31) or in association with other neurologic deficits (32), underwent neuroophthalmologic and neuroradiologic evaluation. Discrepancies between the clinical and radiologic evaluations were analyzed and useful clinical presenting symptoms were identified. Microvascular infarction secondary to diabetes mellitus and/or hypertension was the most common cause in patients with isolated third CNP, and extensive neuroradiologic evaluation is not indicated in this subgroup. The overall diagnostic yield of high-resolution CT for isolated third CNPs was low (30%), but improved to 60% if diabetes and hypertension were excluded. However, CT was highly sensitive (90%) in those patients with third CNPs associated with additional neurologic deficits. The status of the pupil in and of itself cannot be the sole determinant as to whether angiography is indicated to exclude an aneurysm. Careful ophthalmologic observation and relating the severity of pupillomotor dysfunction to extraocular ophthalmoplegia is mandatory to determine the logical sequence of radiologic evaluation. Retroorbital pain taken in isolation is a nonspecific presenting symptom and has differential diagnostic value only if it is correlated temporally with the onset of third CNP and the presence or absence of additional cranial nerve deficits.
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PMID:A cliniconeuroradiologic approach to third cranial nerve palsies. 311 Dec 6

We experienced 9 patients with "painful ophthalmoplegia", which included 7 cases of the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome (2 males and 5 females, with ages ranging from 36 to 65 years) and 2 cases of the orbital pseudotumor syndrome (2 females aged 42 and 68). The diagnosis of these syndromes was based upon Hunt's criteria and the presence of the intraorbital mass on the brain CT scan. Main manifestations of both syndromes were periorbital pain and ipsilateral oculomotor nerve palsies. Out of 9 cases, 1 patient with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and 1 patient with the orbital pseudotumor syndrome had bilateral retro-orbital pain and ophthalmoplegia. Pain preceded the ophthalmoplegia except in one patient with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Total paralysis of the extraocular muscles supplied by the oculomotor nerve was noted in all the nine patients, and mydriasis was observed on the affected side in 4 of 7 patients with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and 2 patients with the orbital pseudotumor syndrome. Neurological involvement was not only the oculomotor nerve but also the other cranial nerves; the optic nerve (in 4 cases with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and 2 cases with the orbital pseudotumor syndrome), the abducens nerve (in 3 cases with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and 1 case with the orbital pseudotumor syndrome), and the first division of the trigeminal nerve (in 2 cases with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome). Six patients with Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and 2 patients with the orbital pseudotumor syndrome had palpebral edema. Visual disturbance and palpebral edema were severer in the patients with the orbital pseudotumor syndrome. After corticosteroid hormone was administered, there was diminution of the pain within 2 weeks.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Painful ophthalmoplegia: the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome and orbital pseudotumor syndrome]. 317 90

Traumatic carotid-cavernous sinus fistula is an uncommon situation resulting from severe trauma, with less than 40 cases having been reported. It is usually associated with a skull base, frontal or mid-facial fracture, but it may also be a spontaneous phenomenon of congenital, infective or degenerative origin. The blood shunts from the internal carotid to the cavernous sinus resulting in pulsating exophthalmos, orbital headache, pain, orbital or frontal bruit, loss of visual acuity, diplopia, ophthalmoplegia and the differential diagnosis should include superior orbital fissure syndrome, orbital apex syndrome and cavernous sinus thrombosis. Several modes of treatment have been proposed. We were recently faced with such a case, who had sustained fractures of the facial skeleton and developed the fistula despite an initial non-contributory angiogram. The patient remained in a permanent coma.
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PMID:Traumatic carotid-cavernous sinus fistula. 320 64

Seven cases of compromised pituitary fossa at the conventional skull X-ray, who had the final diagnosis of giant aneurysm of the intracavernous portion of the carotid artery (6 cases) and one of the anterior communicating artery, are reported. The main findings were: headache (7/7), complex ophthalmoplegia involving the III, IV and VI cranial nerves (5/7), compromised V cranial nerve (4/7) and eyeball pain (4/7). Other manifestations were: meningeal signs (2/7), unilateral blindness (1/7), hemiparesis (1/7), cacosmia (1/7) and inferior bitemporal quadrantanopsia (1/7). Five patients with intracavernous carotid artery aneurysm showed benefits with progressive occlusion of the internal carotid artery at the cervical level. One died before surgery. The case with anterior communicating artery aneurysm improved after its surgical clipping. Our data, in accord with the literature, support the conclusion that the differential diagnosis of aneurysms in the parasellar region remains a very difficult task. The accurate final diagnosis requires cerebral angiography and the surgical treatment with progressive occlusion at the cervical portion of the internal carotid artery has a relatively low risk with promising results.
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PMID:[Giant parasellar aneurysm simulating pituitary tumor]. 324 75

We report a case of bilateral intracavernous giant aneurysms of which the right side was clipped by direct surgery. Our case was a 74-year-old woman who developed bilateral abducens palsy. Computed tomography and angiography showed bilateral intracavernous giant aneurysms. This patient was followed up in the outpatient clinic. She developed headache and right trigeminal neuralgia 2 years later. The trigeminal pain was quite severe and very disturbing to her. Repeat angiography showed an increase in the size of the aneurysms. An operation was carried out after a balloon Matus test monitoring electroencephalogram, somatosensory evoked potential, and clinical symptoms. The cavernous sinus was opened and the aneurysm was clipped. There was no postoperative complication except right ophthalmoplegia which resolved after 3 months. Headache and trigeminal neuralgia also disappeared.
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PMID:Bilateral giant intracavernous aneurysms. Technique of unilateral operation. 333 38


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