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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Head movement-dependent oscillopsia (HMDO) with peripheral vestibular, brainstem and cerebellar lesions is reviewed. The differentiation of this kind of oscillopsia is based mainly on clinical grounds. HMDO with bilateral abolition of caloric responses, and in the absence of disease of the central nervous system, is due to bilateral vestibular disease. HMDO in patients with internuclear
ophthalmoplegia
and other brainstem signs is probably due to a lesion of VOR pathways in or near the medial longitudinal fasciculus. The occurrence of HMDO with ataxia of gait and cerebellar eye movement disorders (rebound nystagmus, flutter-like oscillations), in the absence of brainstem lesions (medial longitudinal fasciculus), is clinical evidence for HMDO due to a cerebellar lesion. An attempt is made to associate the different kinds of oscillopsia with current knowledge of the vestibulo-ocular reflexes.
J Neurol 1978
Dec
07
PMID:Clinical and theoretical aspects of head movement dependent oscillopsia (HMDO). A review. 8 58
A 70-year-old woman with a long history of nasal and sinus polyps developed bilateral proptosis and left total external
ophthalmoplegia
. She was known to have hypercalcemia, which was later discovered to be caused by a parathyroid adenoma. X-ray studies, including computerized tomography, revealed increased radiodensity in the ethmoid sinuses (due to dystrophic calcification from the hypercalcemia), partial absence of the orbital walls from earlier surgical procedures, and bilateral rounded, retrobulbar tumors. At surgery, glistening, yellow, transparent, and encapsulated-lobulated masses were removed from the left orbit; they appeared to have prolapsed through a postsurgical dehiscence in the superomedial orbital wall. Light and electron microscopy confirmed that the lesional tissue represented polyps covered by respiratory epithelium; the yellow color was the consequence of secondary lipidization of the stromal fibroblasts.
Arch Ophthalmol 1979
Dec
PMID:Sino-orbital polyposis. 51 88
Fusiform Aneurysms are encountered in elderly persons with advanced arteriosclerosis. When they are enlarged to compress the neighboring structures, they may resemble tumors symptomatically. Especially when situated in close relation to the optic nerve or chiasmatic region, pituitary tumor is likely to be suspected. This is a case of 62 year old female with a giant fusiform aneurysm of the right internal carotid artery extending to the middle cerebral artery which caused left homonymous hemianopsia and a large aneurysm in the cavernous portion of the left internal carotid artery with fusiform extension of the distal portion of the carotid artery which presented left blepharoptosis, dilated pupil and total
ophthalmoplegia
. The basilar artery and the right meningohypophyseal artery showed fusiform dilatation as well. Systemic atherosclerotic change, abdominal aortic aneurysm, nephrosclerosis were also accompanied. The computed tomography demonstrated the aneurysms distinctly. Left oculomotor palsy disappeared after six months with residue of left homonymous hemianopsia. Surgical intervention was not attempted, because of the widely distributed constitutional aneurysms in the whole body.
No To Shinkei 1979
Dec
PMID:[A case of multiple fusiform aneurysms presenting homonymous hemianopsia (author's transl)]. 52 70
A 25-year old grossly obese woman presented with decreased visual acuity. She had bilateral total (internal and external)
ophthalmoplegia
, a left-sided seventh cranial nerve palsy, and florid bilateral papilledema. The diagnosis of pseudotumor cerebri was made on the basis of high cerebrospinal fluid pressure and the absence of other abnormalities on systemic, neurologic, and neuroradiologic examination. The patient responded favorably to corticosteroid treatment; however, bilateral optic atrophy occurred with persistent loss of visual field and acuity.
Ann Ophthalmol 1979
Dec
PMID:An unusual presentation of pseudotumor cerebri. 55 36
Two patients aged 17 and 25 years with Kearns syndrome are described. This condition is characterized by the triad of chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, pigmentary degeneration of of the retina and cardiac conduction defects. A review of the literature reveals frequent association with other symptoms, mainly cerebellar ataxia, neurosensory hearing loss, small stature, muscle weakness, mental retardation or dementia and endocrine disturbances. In skeletal and extraocular muscle biopsies, abnormalities of mitochondria, at present of unknown significance, have been found. CSF protein is almost always increased. The etiology of this multisystem disorder remains obscure. The 58 published cases have been sporadic, with no evidence of hereditary transmission. The prognosis seems mainly to depend on the progressive cardiac conduction defects, since several patients have already died in the second or third decade due to heart block. Patients with progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
should be investigated for Kearns syndrome. If appropriate, implantation of a cardiac pacemaker should be considered.
Schweiz Med Wochenschr 1977
Dec
17
PMID:[Kearns syndrome. Progressive external ophthalmoplegia, retinal pigment degeneration and heart conduction disorders]. 59 31
Multiple sclerosis is a disease of the central nervous system whose clinical manifestations include animportant group of ocular pathologies, e.g., unilateral retrobulbar neuritis, uveitis, decreased visual function, nystagmus, internuclear
ophthalmoplegia
, diplopia, optic papillitis and Marcus Gunn pupil. Additionally, it is not generally appreciated that bitemporal hemianopia, usually associated with tumors of the optic chiasm, may also result from multiple sclerosis. Since most of a patient's life is spent in the remission phase of the disease, it is important for the practitioner to recognize the ocular findings present during this period. Additionally, studies have shown that such patients lead longer and more productive lives than most practitioners realize, and often have prolonged periods of remission. While the onset of the disease may present with ocular symptoms, such as loss of vision or diplopia, the patients tend to recover and retain relatively good function for many years.
J Am Optom Assoc 1977
Dec
PMID:The ocular manifestations of multiple sclerosis. 59 46
A patient with Friedreich's disease and chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
is descirbed. An investigation was performed into the nature of the ocular motor disorders, which appeared clinically to be supranuclear. The EMG of the ocular muscles suggested myopathy. A specimen of ocular muscle was obtained by biopsy and examined with the light microscope and-for the first time-under the electron microscope. Signs of mitochondrial myopathy were found alongside neurogenic features. Postmortem examination of the central nervous system confirmed the diagnosis of Friedreich's disease with lesions of the motor cells in the anterior horn of the spinal cord. No evidence was found for a supranuclear or inernuclear origin of the ocular palsies, but 20-30 per cent of the neutrons in the nuclei III and IV were atrophic. Lesions of the non-medullated motor nerve fibres were also visible under the electron microscope. That the origin of the c. p. e. o. in this heredo-ataxia is neurogenic-nuclear is postulated on the grounds of the neuropathological and electronmicroscopic findings. Resemblances to the microscopic and submicroscopic and submicroscopic appearance of many types of "ocular myopathy" and "ophthalmoplegia-plus" throw doubt upon the myogenic character of these conditions. Possibly chronic, slowly progressive atrophy in the nuclear areas of the ocular motor nerves must in these cases also be held responsible for the c. p. e. o. Perhaps Moebius's Kern-Schwund theory may be revived after 85 years.
Acta Neurol Scand 1977
Dec
PMID:Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia in a heredo-ataxia: neurogenic or myogenic? A clinical, neuropathological and submicroscopic study. 60 73
A syndrome of acute periorbital pain, followed by the onset of
ophthalmoplegia
, has, in recent years, been recognised as a distinct entity. Six patients conforming to this clinical picture are presented from Zambia, and the characteristics of the syndrome is described. Attention is drawn to the existence of the condition in Arica and to its dramatic improvement with systemic steroid treatment. Particularly in those areas with limited investigatory facilities, the use of steroids can constitute a therapeutic test.
Trop Geogr Med 1977
Dec
PMID:Painful ophthalmoplegia. 61 21
Computed tomography (CT) was used in the management of four patients with periorbital inflammation. These patients were selected for CT scanning because of the difficulty, on clinical examination alone, in determining the degree of orbital disease. The CT scans confirmed the presence and defined the location of an orbital abscess in three patients and eliminated the presence of an abscess in the fourth. On the basis of this experience, CT scanning is recommended in the evaluation of children with periorbital inflammation in whom proptosis,
ophthalmoplegia
, or loss of visual acuity develops, or in whom severe eyelid edema prevents adequate eye examination.
Pediatrics 1978
Dec
PMID:Differentiation of orbital cellulitis from preseptal cellulitis by computed tomography. 73 16
The case of a female patient presenting a complete unilateral
ophthalmoplegia
secundaru to a septic aneurysm of the internal carotid artery is reported. The possible existence of an extravascular infectious etiology in vies of the presence of trombophelebitis of the cavernous sinus is discussed. Pertinent reports from the literature are reviewed and the rarity of the phenomenn is commented. The indication for internal carotid artery ligation as a form of treatment deserves further observations.
Arq Neuropsiquiatr 1976
Dec
PMID:[Mycotic aneurysm of extravascular origin]. 99 74
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