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Drug
Enzyme
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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0038379 (
strabismus
)
9,317
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
See-saw nystagmus
(SSN) is an uncommon disorder that consists of cycles in which one eye rises and intorts while the other depresses and extorts, followed by reversal of the pattern. It typically causes debilitating symptoms including oscillopsia that interfere with activities of daily living. There are myriad etiologies, including stroke, tumors, trauma, and multiple sclerosis. Treatment options are limited and are often unsatisfactory. The authors report a case in which targeted injections of onabotulinum toxin A were used to decrease the torsional component of SSN and thus significantly improve the subjective symptoms of oscillopsia in a patient with acquired SSN.
J Pediatr Ophthalmol
Strabismus
2010 Jul 22
PMID:The use of onabotulinum toxin A in the treatment of see-saw nystagmus. 2115 62
Both see-saw nystagmus and dissociated vertical divergence are cyclovertical eye movements characterized by vertical disconjugation and torsional conjugation.
See-saw nystagmus
is known to occur with chiasmal disorders and bitemporal hemianopia. Dissociated vertical divergence is commonly encountered in the infantile
strabismus
syndrome. A hypothetical model is presented in which both conditions are explained. The basic organization of the oculomotor system is most likely monocular and synchronous eye movements may have developed by neuronal coupling of the symmetrical oculomotor structures. The vertical dissociation of both eye movement disorders is explained by insufficiently developed neuronal coupling between the superior colliculi. A functional differentiation between crossed and uncrossed retinal ganglion cells fibers is assumed to cause this diminished binocular coupling in the case of see-saw nystagmus. The interstitial nucleus of Cajal may well play a pivotal role in explaining the distinct torsional eye movements in both conditions.
Strabismus
2011 Dec
PMID:A neural model for cyclovertical eye movements and their disorders. 2210 22