Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (prolapse)
11,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report here a 9-year-old girl with ophthalmoplegic migraine. At the age of 2 years and 6 months she first developed left ptosis and ophthalmoparesis that resolved gradually within 2 weeks. She experienced similar episodes repeatedly. After 5 years of age, left periorbital pulsatile pain preceded ptosis and ophthalmoparesis, and after 7 years, she showed permanent left third nerve paresis even between the attacks. On cranial MRI the left oculomotor nerve showed swelling and contrast enhancement, the latter being more prominent in the ictal than interictal images. Ophthalmoplegic migraine should be considered in the differential diagnosis of opthalmoplegia in children even in the absence of headache. The diagnosis is strongly suspected when MRI demonstrates swelling and enhancement of the oculomotor nerve.
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PMID:[A case of ophthalmoplegic migraine: swelling and Gd-DTPA enhancement of the oculomotor nerve on MRI]. 1002 36

Ophthalmoplegic migraine is a rare condition, previously thought to represent a variant of migraine. Recent observations regarding its usual clinical presentation and common magnetic resonance imaging findings have given rise to speculation that this illness is more likely to represent an inflammatory cranial neuropathy. The recent revision of the International Headache Classification has reclassified ophthalmoplegic migraine from a subtype of migraine to the category of neuralgia. In this article, potential pathophysiological mechanisms are discussed. The typical clinical presentation of ophthalmoplegic migraine generally involves transient migraine-like headache accompanied by often long-lasting oculomotor, abducens or, rarely, trochlear neuropathy with diplopia and (if oculomotor nerve is involved) pupillary abnormalities and ptosis. Ophthalmoplegic migraine generally occurs in children, but a number of adult cases have been reported. Prognosis is good because symptoms almost always resolve, but, after several episodes, some deficits may persist. Differential diagnosis is rather large, although most other possible causes of ophthalmoplegia and headache have distinctive presentations or can be excluded with fairly straightforward diagnostic testing. Optimal prophylactic and acute treatment is still unclear, but migraine prophylactic medications such as b blockers and calcium channel blockers have been proposed. Steroids have been used with mixed results.
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PMID:Ophthalmoplegic migraine. 1522 91