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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
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11,717
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A 63-year-old man presented with acute-onset right
ptosis
and diplopia. The patient reported having engaged in unspecified sexual activities during his third decade and was found to have positive syphilitic serological findings at the age of 56 years. No clinical symptoms were noted at this time. On admission, he showed only right oculomotor nerve palsy. The patient's intelligence, gait and sensory functions were normal. Laboratory analysis revealed positive syphilitic serological findings and examination of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) further revealed pleocytosis, a higher IgG index and positive syphilitic reactions. A computed tomographic scan and other imaging studies were diagnostically nonspecific. We made a diagnosis of right oculomotor nerve palsy due to syphilitic meningitis. We treated the syphilitic meningitis with intravenous injections of penicillin G (24 million units per day for 21 days). Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction and other side effects were not apparent. We first made a thorough examination of the CSF to rule out diagnosis of meningitis, and pursued methylprednisolone pulse therapy (MPP, 1 g/day for 3 days) to treat the oculomotor nerve palsy. The
ptosis
and diplopia showed signs of improvement following the second MPP therapy session. The present case suggests that
neurosyphilis
is an important differential diagnosis for presentations of unspecific oculomotor nerve palsy and that MPP therapy may prove an effective treatment for it, even where there has been the long clinical onset.
...
PMID:[A case report of syphilitic meningitis with right oculomotor nerve palsy]. 1283 88
We report a 73-year-old woman with meningitis-type
neurosyphilis
presenting the main symptom of the left total ophthalmoplegia. Three months after the appearance of the deviation of the eyeball to the inside and
ptosis
of the left eyelid, the left eyelid was completely closed. On admission, about four months after the appearance of
neurosyphilis
, she showed paralysis of the left oculomotor nerve, trochlearis nerve and abducens nerve, and the right mydriasis and absent light reflex. She was diagnosed as meningovascular
neurosyphilis
because syphilitic antibodies reactions in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid were highly positive. We treated her with intravenous infusion drop of penicillin G (eighteen-million units/day) for ten days, and those symptoms mentioned above other than light reflex were completely recovered. Bilateral internal carotid arteries situated close each other at the supraclinoid portion. The internal carotid arteries were not enhanced on Gd-MRI and the stenosis of the arteries were not detected on MRA. However, we suppose that the inflammation of meninges at that portion spreads to the bilateral internal carotid arteries, and that the III, IV and VI nerves close to the left internal carotid artery were damaged. There have been no reports of meningovascular
neurosyphilis
with the manifestation of unilateral ophthalmoplegia. In the patients of meningovascular
neurosyphilis
, however, various cranial nerve palsies can be appeared. Therefore we suggest that
neurosyphilis
should always be taken into consideration as differential diagnosis of cranial nerve palsies.
...
PMID:[Neurosyphilis presenting the left total ophthalmoplegia: a case report]. 1528 13