Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Painful ophthalmoplegia is characterized by unilateral involvement of the IIIrd, IVth and VIth cranial nerves, as well as supra- and retro-orbital pain, i.e. participation of the Vth cranial nerve. The pain is relieved within 48-72 h with steroid therapy. The paresis of the eye muscles in various combinations usually subsides gradually from within a few weeks to several months. The etiology is unknown. The few pathological examinations reported in the literature showed an unspecific inflammatory granulation tissue around the intracavernous portion of the carotid artery and on the dura mater in the vicinity of the cavernous sinus. Carotid arteriography may show stationary waves of this artery and narrowing of its intracavernous portion. With orbital phlebography the occlusion of the supraorbital vein and obstruction of the cavernous sinus are sometimes demonstrable. The syndrome is well defined and its etiology still unknown.
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PMID:Painful ophthalmoplegia: the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. 23 81

Painful ophthalmoplegia consists of periorbital or hemicranial pain with ipsilateral ocular motor nerve palsies. There are many etiologies of painful ophthalmoplegia. Tolosa-Hunt syndrome (THS) is an uncommon disease caused by non-specific inflammation of the cavernous sinus, superior orbital fissure and the apex of the orbit. A 45-year-old female reported episodes of reversible left eye pain and diplopia. Examination showed periorbital oedema and left palpebral semiptosis, paresis of the partial left third nerve palsy with normal pupillary reactions, fourth and sixth left cranial nerves, and hypoesthesia over the first and second division of the left trigeminal nerve. Blood analysis, postcontrast cranial and orbital magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, cranial MR angiography and CSF analysis demonstrated no abnormalities. The clinical diagnosis satisfies the criteria for THS. After steroid therapy her symptoms and clinical signs dramatically reverses. Painful ophthalmoplegia with inflammatory conditions such as THS is highly responsive to corticosteroids but should be diagnoses of exclusion. The THS diagnosis should be used rarely and with great caution.
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PMID:Painful ophthalmoplegia: a case report and literature review. 2686 Apr 97