Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
prolapse
)
11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A three-year-old girl was admitted to the hospital one day after the acute onset of drooping of the left eyelid, associated with oculomotor external
ophthalmoplegia
. General neurological and physical examination was unremarkable. Results of serological tests as well as the clinical course of the disease (spontaneous recovery) show that the unilateral oculomotor neuropathy was most likely due to a self-limited enteroviral infection. The virus could not be cultured in the CSF. Echovirus type 11 as well as Coxsackie B4 virus might have caused the disease. During treatment with prednisone for 3 weeks in decreasing doses the girl recovered, by the seventh day she was able to raise her eyelid. 3 1/2 months later she had no evidence of residual
ptosis
and full range of ocular movements.
...
PMID:[Transient unilateral oculomotor paralysis]. 401 Jun 74
Thiamine deficiency in the monkey is the animal counterpart of Wernicke's disease in humans. In the present study, thiamine deficiency was induced in 11 monkeys while three monkeys were given paired feedings supplemented by thiamine hydrochloride and three monkeys were maintained on regular chow. The typical clinical symptoms were apathy, inattention to peripheral stimuli, ataxia,
ptosis
, mydriasis progressing to pupillary areflexia, nystagmus, and ophthalmoparesis progressing to total
ophthalmoplegia
. With thiamine treatment, recovery was prompt and complete in mild to moderate cases but delayed and incomplete in severe cases. The animals were killed six or more months after discontinuance of the experiments to determine the chronic effects of treated thiamine deficiency. The significant abnormalities in the brain stem were symmetric gliosis and neuronal loss in the inferior colliculi, the regions of the third and sixth nerve nuclei, and the medial vestibular nuclei. White matter was characteristically spared. With the exception of the inferior colliculi, the target sites for neuropathologic changes were the centers for ocular motor control.
...
PMID:Ocular signs in thiamine-deficient monkeys and in Wernicke's disease in humans. 402 52
A patient with a classical locked-in syndrome is described, in whom bilateral
ptosis
was observed on the 2nd day. On the 4th day,
ophthalmoplegia
was complete with the exception of a voluntary downward movement of the right eye. The syndrome can be explained by the association of bilateral horizontal pontine gaze palsy and a unilateral nuclear oculomotor nerve palsy, and approximates the "total locked-in syndrome".
...
PMID:Locked-in syndrome with bilateral ptosis: combination of bilateral horizontal pontine gaze paralysis and nuclear oculomotor nerve paralysis. 407 3
Burkitt's lymphoma was first reported by Burkitt in 1958 as a sarcoma involving the jaw in African children with characteristic symptoms. Forty three Japanese cases have been reported since the first description by Oboshi et al. in 1969. We report a case of Burkitt's lymphoma with left total
ophthalmoplegia
. A 73-year-old Japanese female was admitted in Sadamoto Hospital on July 11, 1983 with a two-week history of headache,
ptosis
and double vision. The patient was exposed to the atomic bomb in Hiroshima and had ten-year history of hypertension. On admission, physical examination showed hypertension and neurological examination revealed only left total
ophthalmoplegia
(such as left
ptosis
, external
ophthalmoplegia
, mydriasis and deficit of light reflex). Plain X-ray film and enhanced CT scan showed no remarkable abnormalities. Laboratory examinations revealed high serum levels of GOT(51 K.U.) and LDH (1300 U.). Left carotid and right retrograde branchial angiograms showed no remarkable abnormal findings. While the patient was treated only conservatively, left abducent and trochleal nerve palsy appeared on August 5, 1983. On plain and enhanced CT scans at the time, abnormal density mass with bone destruction of the left sphenoidal sinus was demonstrated. Biopsy specimen from the left sphenoidal sinus showed lymphosarcomatous cells. Peripheral blood and bone marrow smears showed lymphoma cells which are compatible with L3-Burkitt's type according to FAB leukemia classification. The patient was diagnosed as leukemic transformation of Burkitt's lymphoma and treated with CHOP; Cyclophosphamide (C), Hydroxydaunorubicin(H), Vincristine (O), and Prednisolone (P).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of Burkitt's lymphoma with total ophthalmoplegia]. 408 40
Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy is a localized or restricted variety of muscular dystrophy, characterized by bilateral
ptosis
, myopathic facies, external
ophthalmoplegia
and dysphagia. A patient with this unusual myopathy is described and detailed esophageal motility studies are presented that provide conclusive evidence of both striated and smooth muscle involvement.Because these unusual localized forms of muscular dystrophy exist and may be of late onset, previous rigid concepts concerning the dystrophies should be discarded.
...
PMID:Late-onset muscle dystrophy: oculopharyngoesophageal variety. 594 Mar 25
Two middle-aged women presented with bilateral acute painful proptosis,
ptosis
,
ophthalmoplegia
, and visual loss. In both an initial diagnosis of orbital cellulitis was made, but they did not respond to systemic antibiotics. Orbital computerised tomographic (CT) scans were thus done within 36 h of admission and they showed grossly enlarged extraocular muscles in each case suggestive of dysthyroid eye disease. Clinical examination was otherwise normal. When high doses of systemic steroids were substituted for the antibiotics the physical signs resolved rapidly, accompanied by a dramatic reduction in the size of extraocular muscles on CT scanning. One patient subsequently became clinically hypothyroid, while the other showed clinical and biochemical evidence of thyroid overactivity. These case-reports suggest that patients with bilateral acute painful proptosis should have an early CT scan to exclude atypical dysthyroid disease. Delay in giving systemic steroids may allow the development of unnecessary visual loss due to optic nerve damage.
...
PMID:Graves' disease presenting with bilateral acute painful proptosis, ptosis, ophthalmoplegia, and visual loss. 614 3
A patient with infarction of the paramedian part of the lower midbrain on the right side is described, in whom internuclear
ophthalmoplegia
and bilateral
ptosis
were associated with limitation of elevation of the contralateral eye from paresis of the superior rectus. Supranuclear paresis was suggested by partial dissociation between phasic and tonic components of upward gaze. It is suggested that the right-sided lesion involved the rostral median longitudinal fasciculus before it reached the oculomotor nucleus, the central caudal nucleus medially situated in the lower end of the oculomotor nucleus, and the prenuclear fibres from the posterior commissure to the ipsilateral nucleus of the contralateral superior rectus. A supranuclear lesion may be suspected when there is a complex association of dysconjugate palsy of oculomotor muscles.
...
PMID:Internuclear ophthalmoplegia, prenuclear paresis of contralateral superior rectus, and bilateral ptosis. 619 15
A 57-year-old woman presented with a
ptosis
of her left eye four weeks prior to surgery for scirrhous carcinoma of the breast. Six months later she had blurred vision in her left eye, and double vision occurred three months subsequently. The diagnosis was enophthalmus and
ophthalmoplegia
. The suspected diagnosis of a distant metastasis of the scirrhous carcinoma of the breast was confirmed by biopsy. The orbital symptoms were a rare first sign not only of a metastatic process, but also of the carcinoma itself.
...
PMID:[Enophthalmos with limitation of bulbar motility as a rare clinical symptom of metastasizing carcinoma of the breast (author's transl)]. 625 81
In one of two siblings a clinical disorder was described, consisting of a slowly progressive juvenile parkinsonism with extensor plantar responses, external
ophthalmoplegia
with severe
ptosis
and a motor and sensory polyneuropathy. The younger sibling had only juvenile parkinsonism, Unilateral
ptosis
and a motor and sensory polyneuropathy. Their father was neurologically normal except for a unilateral
ptosis
. There did not seem to be consanguinity in this family.
...
PMID:External ophthalmoplegia, juvenile parkinsonism and axonal polyneuropathy in two siblings. 627 73
Clinical, histochemical and ultrastructural findings concerning 14 cases with diagnosis of Chronic Progressive External Ophthalmoplegia are described. According to the clinical features the patients have been rated in two groups: the first including subjects with isolated
ptosis
or
ptosis
with external
ophthalmoplegia
and the second including subjects with a spreading of the muscular deficit and involvement of the neck and limbs. The most frequent histological and histochemical features are type I fibre atrophy, ragged-red fibres, DPNH-diaphorase reaction disorders and abnormal accumulation of lipids into the fibres. Electron microscopy reveal myofibrillar disorganization and clusters of polymorphous, abnormal mitochondria. In five cases mitochondria contain a variety of crystalline inclusions. Correlations between clinical data and histochemical and ultrastructural findings are discussed. Mitochondrial abnormalities are postulated to be a characteristic physiopathological pattern in CPEO.
...
PMID:Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia. Clinical, electrophysiological, histochemical and ultrastructural studies of 14 cases. 629 31
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>