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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Adie's syndrome comprises a tonic pupil, which may be associated with impairment of accommodation, in the presence of diminished or absent deep tendon reflexes. We report a case of a 4-year-old boy with Adie's syndrome in which latent hypermetropia was made manifest by accommodative
paresis
and resulted in reversible
amblyopia
.
...
PMID:Adie's syndrome as a cause of amblyopia. 366 64
Three patients with various manifestations of the amniotic band syndrome associated with strabismus are presented and discussed. All three cases demonstrate a paralytic strabismus due to a unilateral
paresis
-paralysis of the medial rectus in one case and of the superior rectus in another. The third case showed a bilateral lateral rectus paralysis. In two cases, the strabismus was accompanied by other ocular manifestations, while in one patient strabismus and
amblyopia
were the sole ophthalmological findings. In two of the cases, a direct association between the mesodermal bands and the strabismus could be established, while in one case this association might have been incidental. Careful ophthalmological followup and treatment of these cases prevented needless loss of vision while appropriate muscle surgery restored acceptable cosmetic appearance in one case.
...
PMID:Amniotic band syndrome and strabismus. 720 45
This study evaluated the ophthalmological outcome following sixth nerve palsy or
paresis
in 64 children 7 years of age and younger. The outcomes considered were vision, residual strabismus and the need for strabismus surgery. Etiologies included tumor, hydrocephalus, trauma, infection, malformation, and idiopathic and miscellaneous causes. Strabismus surgery was performed on 24% of the patients, with residual strabismus present in 66% of the patients. Neurologists and ophthalmologists should monitor visual acuity in these young children at frequent intervals be prepared to institute
amblyopia
therapy early in the course of the ocular misalignment if permanent visual disability is to be avoided.
...
PMID:Outcome of sixth nerve palsy or paresis in young children. 763 94
In young and middle age subjects, spontaneous carotid dissection is an increasingly recognized cause of ischemic stroke. Their usual presentation is facial pain with a Horner syndrome and a contra lateral
paresis
. Blindness has been reported as a presenting symptom in only a few cases. We report a 50 years old man who presented with
amblyopia
in the left eye, without periocular pain. Fundoscopy showed papilledema and a peripapillar hemorrhage, compatible with an ischemic optic neuropathy. A magnetic resonance angiography confirmed a left carotid dissection.
...
PMID:[Blindness caused by an ischemic optic neuropathy by spontaneous carotid dissection. Report of a case]. 1463 92
Oculomotor nerve disease is a common cause of diplopia. When strabismus is present, absence of diplopia has to induce the research of either uncovering of visual fields or monocular suppression,
amblyopia
or blindness. We describe the case of a 41-year-old woman presenting with right oculomotor
paresis
and left object-centred visual neglect due to a right fronto-parietal haemorrhage expanding to the right peri-mesencephalic cisterna caused by the rupture of a right middle cerebral artery aneurysm. She never complained of diplopia despite binocular vision and progressive recovery of strabismus, excluding uncovering of visual fields. Since all other causes were excluded in this case, we hypothesise that the absence of diplopia was due to the object-centred visual neglect. Partial internal right oculomotor
paresis
causes an ocular deviation in abduction; the image being perceived deviated contralaterally to the left. Thus, in our case, the neglect of the left image is equivalent to a right monocular functional blindness. However, bell cancellation test clearly worsened when assessed in left monocular vision confirming that eye patching can worsen attentional visual neglect. In conclusion, our case argues for the possibility of a functional monocular blindness induced by visual neglect. We think that in presence of strabismus, absence of diplopia should induce the search for hemispatial visual neglect when supratentorial lesions are suspected.
...
PMID:Could visual neglect induce amblyopia? 1574 7
Patients with long-standing unilateral strabismus, such as "sensory" exotropia in the absence of fusion, or esotropia with unilateral
amblyopia
, typically show bilateral deviations under anesthesia, often symmetric. Forced ductions usually show symmetric muscle tightness. Changes in extraocular muscle lengths thus appear to occur primarily bilaterally, whether fusion is present or not. With skeletal muscles responding to changes in stimulation by the gain or loss of sarcomeres, it is likely that abnormal or unguided vergence tonus, which changes the lengths of the extraocular muscles bilaterally, is largely responsible for changes in the angle of strabismus over time. This mechanism helps explain the development of [1] increasing "basic" deviations in accommodative esotropia; [2] torsional deviations with apparent oblique muscle "overaction/underaction" and A and V patterns; [3] recurrent esotropia with early presbyopia; [4] occasional divergence insufficiency in presbyopes; and [5] basic cyclovertical deviations that mimic superior oblique muscle
paresis
.
...
PMID:The 10th Bielschowsky Lecture. Changes in strabismus over time: the roles of vergence tonus and muscle length adaptation. 1679 23
The congenital retinocephalic facial vascular malformation syndrome is characterized by unilateral, nonhereditary retinal and cerebral arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) and is occasionally associated with orbital vascular changes. Typical signs are facial and oral mucosal vascular changes, rarely with changes of the maxilla or mandible. An AVM causes high blood flow because of direct connection (shunting) of major vessels without interposition of capillaries. Ocular complications include retinal and vitreous hemorrhages, edema, venous occlusion (risk of rubeosis iridis and secondary glaucoma). Neuroophthalmological changes comprise optic atrophy, papilledema, proptosis, pupillary changes, hemianopia, gaze
paresis
, nystagmus, cranial nerve palsies, strabismus, and
amblyopia
. Neurological complications include headache, subarachnoid hemorrhage, convulsions, cerebral hemorrhages, increased intracranial pressure, hydrocephalus, and stroke with hemiparesis. Threatening oral hemorrhages or epistaxis may rarely occur.
...
PMID:[Congenital retinocephalic facial vascular malformation syndrome. Bonnet-Dechaume-Blanc syndrome or Wyburn-Mason syndrome]. 1915 63
This is an overview of a few general aspects of Brown's syndrome followed by a case report of a three year old girl suffering from congenital Brown's syndrome, astigmatism and
amblyopia
, which was detected by an ophthalmological screening at her kindergarten. The main differential diagnosis is ipsilateral inferior oblique
paresis
/paralysis. Since this was a mild-degree syndrome, it didn't require surgery only optical treatement and follow-up.
...
PMID:[Brown syndrome. General considerations. Case report]. 2264 36