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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
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11,717
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In 1963, Calverley and Mohnac reported four cases with sensory disturbance of the mental nerve region. They emphasized the symptomatological significance of that finding because of the underlying ominous diseases. The purpose of this paper is to emphasize the clinical importance of this symptom especially as the initial manifestation of the underlying malignant diseases. A 56-year-old Japanese female was seen in consultation because of complaints of the paresthesia over the distribution of the right mental nerve,
diplopia
and
ptosis
of the right side. The patient had been well until a hundred days prior to admission, when she noted numbness with pain of the right mental nerve region. This symptom was followed by
ptosis
of the right side and
diplopia
after five weeks. MRI-CT scan revealed an abnormally low intensity echo (in T1 weighted image) of the bone around sphenoid sinus and tumor of the cavernous sinus (in T2 weighted image) compressing the right internal carotid artery. The patient was transferred to this hospital 100 days after the occurrence of the initial symptom. Physical examination revealed neither superficial lymph node swelling nor buccal tumor. Abnormal findings were restricted to the cranial nerve regions such as
diplopia
, adduction disturbance, sluggish light reflex of the right side and hypesthesia on the right chin, lower lip and buccal mucous membrane. Other neurological findings were not significant. Laboratory findings showed elevated LDH (1,503 IU/L). Leucocyte cell count was 7,500/mm3 with almost normal composition. CSF was normal. A diagnosis of Burkitt's lymphoma stage IV was done by nasopharynx and bone marrow biopsies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of Burkitt's lymphoma with numb chin syndrome as the initial manifestation]. 258 91
13 (59%) of 22 cases of confirmed multiple sclerosis were of acute or subacute onset and 12 cases (18 eyes) had acute retrobulbar neuritis with acute visual impairment as the initial symptom. During the course of disease, other ocular complaints occurred, such as
ptosis
,
diplopia
, nystagmus, pupil signs, visual field defects, or optic nerve disorders. The initial symptoms, clinical manifestations, morbid course, diagnosis, and pathological findings were also touched upon.
...
PMID:[Ocular findings in multiple sclerosis]. 262 Jun 15
The response to different therapeutic methods was evaluated in a series of 264 patients with blepharospasm. The most effective drug therapy were anticholinergic agents, which resulted in the initial improvement of symptoms in 20% of treated patients. There was improvement in isolated cases treated with levodopa, dopaminergic agonists, neuroleptics, benzodiazepines and tricyclic antidepressants. Bilateral avulsion of the facial nerve was carried out in 29 patients; 27 of these (93%) improved. Spasms relapsed in 22 cases, after a mean period of 12 months. Myectomy of the orbicular muscle was performed in 8 patients. In only 2 cases some improvement was obtained. One hundred and fifty-one patients were treated with infiltrations of botulinum toxin A in the orbicular muscle. 78% of cases improved. The mean duration of the benefit of each injection was 9.2 weeks. The most common secondary effects were local (
ptosis
,
diplopia
) and transient.
...
PMID:[Pharmacologic, surgical and infiltration of botulin toxin treatment in blepharospasm]. 263 60
A case of Raeder's syndrome caused by metastatic malignant lymphoma was reported. The patient was 67-year-old male. He had complained of
diplopia
,
ptosis
and frontal headache at the left side. Neurological examinations revealed left incomplete Horner's syndrome (miosis and
ptosis
, but normal facial sweating) and left abducens palsy, which was considered to be Raeder's syndrome Group 1 (Boniuk and Schlazinger's classification). CT scan, MRI and angiography demonstrated a mass lesion in the left cavernous sinus extending to the sphenoparietal sinus, and a mass lesion in the anterior part of the superior sagittal sinus. During his hospitalization, enlargement of the left cervical lymph nodes was noticed. "Malignant lymphoma (non-Hodgkin)" was diagnosed on the basis of biopsy. Group 1 of Raeder's syndrome is rare, but it is important to define the site of lesion, which is located around the paratrigeminal region at the middle cranial fossa. Because these lesions are very small and metastatic in many cases, various neuroradiological investigations, especially MRI, are necessary for early diagnosis and early treatment.
...
PMID:[A case of Raeder's syndrome caused by metastatic malignant lymphoma]. 266 89
Many reports of diabetic ophthalmoplegia have been published from the clinical points of view. However, there have been only three autopsied cases in which the ocular nerves were investigated histopathologically. A 72-year-old housewife was diagnosed to have glycosuria at the age of 67, but no medical treatment was done. She admitted to the hospital, because of acute onset of right eyelid drooping and
diplopia
for previous four days. She showed complete eyelid
ptosis
, moderate dilatation of right pupil, loss of light reaction, and extraocular muscle palsy except abduction on the right. Blood pressure was normal. A glucose tolerance test was diabetic and HbA1c was moderately increased. Her diabetes was fairly well-controlled with a diet therapy and injection of lente insulin. Two and a half months after admission, the course of illness became regressive. Seven months later, external ophthalmoplegia was disappeared and only slight anisocoria was seen. She readmitted to the hospital one year and eleven months later, because of anorexia and emaciation. She died of adenocarcinoma of the stomach without chemotherapy. The duration from onset of ocular symptoms to death was two years and one month. At postmortem examination, stomach cancer infiltrated extensively to the abdominal and pelvic viscera, but no metastasis to the nervous system or intraorbital tissues was found. There were mild to moderate atherosclerotic changes in the small-and middle-sized arteries of the kidneys, pancreas and adrenal glands corresponding to her age. Moderate atherosclerosis was found in all of the major arteries including Willis ring, siphon of the right internal carotid artery and Vertebro-basilar one.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Diabetic ophthalmoplegia--a clinico-pathological study of the first case in Japan]. 269 31
We report the case of a woman with short nocturnal attacks of peri- and retro-orbital pain,
diplopia
,
ptosis
, rhinorrhea and lacrimation of five months evolution. Neurological examination was normal between attacks. The latter presented with partial third nerve palsy, which finally became complete and permanent. Brain CT showed a sellar and supraseller tumor with parasellar extension to the right side. We stress the atypical clinical presentation and evolution of this case, and discuss its pathophysiology.
...
PMID:Pituitary adenoma presenting as painful intermittent third nerve palsy. 275 52
Twenty-six patients with oculomotor nerve palsy due to cerebral aneurysms were examined. There were six males and twenty females with a mean age of 55 years. 25 of the 26 aneurysms were located at the junction of the internal carotid and the posterior communicating artery and one was at the junction of the basilar artery and the superior cerebellar artery. Twelve patients had associated subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH); the other 14 did not. The initial symptoms in many patients were
ptosis
and
double vision
. Twenty-one of the patients had total oculomotor nerve palsy, one had a sparing of medial rectus muscle; three patients had only
ptosis
and anisocoria, and one had oculomotor nerve palsy with pupillary sparing. All aneurysms, including giant aneurysms, were clipped under a microscope, and six oculomotor nerves were found to be decompressed at surgery. The follow-up periods were from six months to three years. Nine patients had a complete recovery of oculomotor function; thirteen had an incomplete recovery; and four remained unchanged. The mean interval between the onset of palsy and the time of surgery was 24 days in complete recovery cases, 42 days in incomplete recovery cases, and 119 days in unchanged cases. The recovery of oculomotor function started with the levator palpebrae muscle and followed by the medial rectus muscle. The recovery of pupillary function was, however, not consistent. Of the factors influencing recovery from oculomotor nerve palsy, the interval between the onset of palsy and the time of surgery was most important. Therefore, aneurysms with oculomotor nerve palsy should be operated on as early as possible, regardless of the presence or absence of SAH.
...
PMID:Oculomotor nerve palsy in patients with cerebral aneurysms. 277 90
We have used botulinum toxin (Oculinum) for the past 2 years to treat strabismus and other ophthalmic conditions. It was effective for blepharospasm and hemifacial spasm, and in producing pharmacological
ptosis
. There were a few local complications, such as
ptosis
and
diplopia
, which disappeared within a few weeks. This is a new treatment modality with specific indications in ophthalmology.
...
PMID:[Use of botulinum toxin in ophthalmology]. 279 58
A 37-year-old man suffered from photosensitivity and urinary casts with serological findings of positive anti-DNA antibody, LE cells and false positive VD reaction in September of 1979. He developed general fatigue, dyspnea and
diplopia
with
ptosis
of bilateral eyelids in November of 1979, which were improved by the anti-cholinesterase drugs. In January of 1980, he had an attack of unconsciousness and his chest X-ray film showed several tumorous shadows in the anterior mediastinum and middle and lower lung fields. Treating him with chemotherapy of VEMP, the pulmonary shadows disappeared. However, he developed severe muscle weakness with an elevated CPK (430 mU/ml) and a myogenic EMG pattern along with an increased anti-acetylcholine receptor antibody (243 n Mol/l), dysphagia and eyelid-
ptosis
. He died in September of 1985 and his autopsy disclosed a malignant thymoma of mixed type in the anterior mediastinum and an atrophy and fibrosis with infiltration of inflammatory cells in the striated muscles.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of a patient with myasthenia gravis who showed various symptoms of collagen diseases and complicated with malignant thymoma]. 281 7
Monitoring neuromuscular transmission provides valuable information to the anesthesiologist. The acquisition of relevant data contributes to a more predictable and rational approach to the use of muscle relaxants and assures improved patient care during and in the immediate postoperative period. Clinical noninvasive criteria such as the presence or absence of
diplopia
and or
ptosis
, the ability to open the eyes widely, protrude the tongue or swallow, measurement of hand grip strength or head lift or assessment of the vital capacity are limited to awake and cooperative patients. Measurement of inspiratory force and tidal volume can be evaluated in anesthetized patients breathing spontaneously. Central depressant drugs tend to depress these respiratory parameters. Accordingly, the assumption that relaxants are responsible for respiratory depression at the end of an anesthetic can only be documented when impairment of neuromuscular transmission can be demonstrated. The most reliable method of measuring neuromuscular function is to stimulate an accessible peripheral motor nerve and measurement of the evoked response of the skeletal muscle or muscles innervated by the stimulated motor nerve. The evoked muscle response depends on the pattern of motor nerve stimulation: Single twitch stimuli at a defined frequency, tetanic stimulation, posttetanic single twitch stimulation or train-of-four stimulation. The response to these different modes of stimulation can be assessed either mechanically (evoked tension response) or electrically (evoked electromyography: EMG or integrated EMG). These response criteria can be employed either individually or combined to evaluate the response to muscle relaxants and to assess the adequacy of recovery from neuromuscular blockade.
...
PMID:Monitoring of neuromuscular function. 282 Nov 37
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