Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (ophthalmoplegia)
3,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two cases are described presenting a clinical picture of sudden headache, fever and vomiting, accompanied by unilateral ophthalmoplegia and acute deterioration of visual acuity. In one this amounted to monocular blindness with a field defect in the other, indicative of chiasmal compression. Necrotic pituitary adenoma material was removed by the transphenoidal route in both cases. Recovery of eye movements was obtained and considerable improvement of visual acuity, which in one patient, was restored completely.
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PMID:Trans-sphenoidal surgical approach in pituitary apoplexy. 126 21

A 9-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy had ptosis, progressive external ophthalmoplegia, pigmentary retinopathy, and sensorineural hearing loss. The girl had diabetes mellitus and the boy had hypoparathyroidism. Both children also developed recurrent vomiting and cerebral infarcts with lactic acidosis. Muscle biopsy specimens showed ragged-red fibers and Southern analysis demonstrated a distinct heteroplasmic deletion of muscle mitochondrial DNA in each patient but no evidence of the point mutation in the transfer RNALeu(UUR) gene recently identified in mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS). These 2 children had combined features of Kearns-Sayre syndrome and MELAS, suggesting that mitochondrial DNA deletions occasionally can have pleomorphic clinical expression.
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PMID:Deletion of mitochondrial DNA in patients with combined features of Kearns-Sayre and MELAS syndromes. 189 71

A 59 year-old female with hypercereatinekinasemia associated with pituitary apoplexy was presented. The patient showed headache, nausea, vomiting and pyrexia. On admission, slight nuchal rigidity and photophobia were observed. However all the cranial nerves were intact; neither ophthalmoplegia nor visual defect were observed. Cerebrospinal fluid analysis revealed an elevated protein concentration of 164 mg/dl. There were 157 cells/mm2 (30% neutrophils). Skull X-P disclosed the ballooning of the sella turcica. CT scan, endocrinological examination and angiography lead us to the diagnosis of pituitary apoplexy. By the sphenoidal approach necrotic tissue with a little chromophobe adenoma were removed. No haematoma was detected. The isozyme pattern of serum CK showed 100 percent MM type. Serum CK concentration reached as high as 2502 IU/l on the fifth day from the onset of the symptom and then normalized in 12 days. Though the cause of the hypercreatinekinasemia uncertain, the similar pattern of hypercreatinekinasemia is known in the acute stage of cerebrovascular accident, and it is more often observed in thalamic hemorrhage. We assumed that the hypercreatinekinasemia in our case was caused by hypothalamic irritation, which lead hyperpermeability of sarcolemma and leakage of the enzymes of muscle origin.
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PMID:[Pituitary apoplexy with hypercreatinekinasemia]. 235 Sep 34

Hypophysis apoplexy is a clinical syndrome characterized by the sudden development of headache, visual disturbance, associated with nausea, vomiting, signs of meningeal irritation and ophthalmoplegia. The symptoms are caused by the hemorrhage of a hypophyseal adenoma. This leads to the swelling of the tumor and compression of the perisellar structures. The authors processed the clinical and pathological characteristics of 28 cases occurring among the patient material of the National Institute of Neurosurgery of the past 10 years. According to the experiences the most important factor of a successful treatment of hypophyseal apoplexy is an early diagnosis and quick admittance to an institute of neurosurgery of satisfactory conditions. Thereafter a steroid hormone therapy of large doses and decompression operation performed by transnasal-transsphenoidal approach leads in the majority of cases to recovery.
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PMID:[Surgical treatment of pituitary apoplexy]. 264 84

A 7-year-old girl presented with bilaterally dilated pupils, nausea, and vomiting 2 days after head trauma. Pilocarpine pupil testing led to the correct diagnosis of pharmacologic pupillary dilation from an unexpected and unusual source of plant poisoning, Solanum dulcamara (blue nightshade). In patients with internal ophthalmoplegia, awareness of the possibility of pharmacologic mydriasis and correct use of topical pilocarpine testing can preclude the necessity for neuroradiologic and invasive diagnostic studies, even in cases with atypical or complex presentations.
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PMID:Accidental mydriasis from blue nightshade "lipstick". 295 78

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

A 61-year-old woman is presented with a bilateral total ophthalmoplegia as an initial ocular symptom, caused by a midbrain hematoma. She complained of acute headache, nausea, vomiting and bilateral closure of her eyelids. Examination on admission showed meningeal irritation; mild consciousness disturbance; bilateral total ophthalmoplegia; left hemiparesis; ataxia in all extremities, more marked to the left. Computed tomography demonstrated a small hematoma in the midbrain tegmentum. Angiography demonstrated midbrain arteriovenous malformation, and she was treated conservatively. Abduction of both eyes and adduction of the left eye appeared on the next day of the ictus, and after that, improved gradually. Left ptosis had improved since one week after the ictus. Light reflex of the left pupil had seen 5 days after the ictus. At the same time, the left pupil revealed an oval-shape. Right internal ophthalmoplegia continued to exist. One year later, the right eye deviated externally, and the left deviated inferio-medially. Abduction of both eyes was normal. Infraduction of both eyes was seen, but limited on the left. Upgaze paresis remained unchanged, and adduction of the right eye was absent. Adduction of the left eye showed almost full recovery. There was right complete ptosis, but left ptosis became indefinite. These ocular findings indicated typical right oculomotor paresis plus superior rectus paresis of the left eye, which suggested a destructive lesion in the right oculomotor nucleus. Also, her left extremities showed a hemiparesis as a pyramidal tract sign (Weber's syndrome) and an ataxia as a cerebellar sign (Claude's syndrome).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Midbrain arteriovenous malformation causing bilateral total ophthalmoplegia as an initial ocular symptom--a case report]. 337 Jan 70

Pain characteristics of the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome were abstracted from the observations of five patients with repeated incidents of painful ophthalmoplegia. The pain was experienced either as pressure behind the ophthalmoplegic eye or as boring pain in one orbital region, fluctuating in intensity, sometimes worsening to knife stab-like pain in the eye. The unilateral pain did not shift side during a solitary incident of painful ophthalmoplegia and was never completely absent. The pain was increased when the eyes were strained, when cold wind blew against the face, and when a change in the weather took place. It was accompanied by a feeling of swelling in the affected region, but not by nausea nor vomiting. Conventional headache drugs provided little relief. All cases experienced tenderness when pressure was applied to the ipsilateral supraorbital foramen. The pain was suggested to be related to an increased load on the impaired venous blood flow in the region of the superior orbital fissure.
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PMID:Pain characteristics of painful ophthalmoplegia (the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome). 401 17

A 58-year-old woman had the sudden onset of unilateral painful proptosis, ophthalmoplegia, vomiting, and loss of vision. Computed axial tomography showed a mass that was greatly attenuated in the orbit. The initial reading of the internal carotid angiogram was normal, but a subtraction study showed a hypervascular lesion within the orbit with features indicating a hemangioma. Orbital decompression failed to restore the vision as intraorbital hemorrhage had irreparably damaged the optic nerve.
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PMID:Orbital hemorrhage with loss of vision. 698 56

A 28-month-old Korean girl developed a rapidly progressive disease, characterized by disturbance of consciousness, tremor, nystagmus, ophthalmoplegia, irregular deep respiration and vomiting. The patient succumbed 2 weeks after the onset of the illness. CT scan disclosed bilaterally symmetrical, low density lesions in the white matter and lateral basal ganglia. Distinctive histopathological findings at postmortem included spongiotic necrosis of the neuropil, marked capillary vascularity, persistence of relatively normal neurons in severely damaged zones, and comparatively little astrocytosis. The bilaterally symmetrical distribution of these changes in the putamen and periaqueductal gray matter of the midbrain were compatible with Leigh's disease.
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PMID:Leigh's subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy: possible diagnosis by CT scan. 731 63


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