Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0344232 (blurred vision)
2,072 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

All patients presenting with neurological problems to an eye hospital casualty department over one year were prospectively studied. A total of 119 patients were identified. The most frequent diagnoses were retrobulbar neuritis (34; 28.5%), sixth cranial nerve palsy (22; 18.5%), third cranial nerve palsy (15; 12.6%) and Adie's tonic pupil (11; 9%). Cranial nerve palsies were most commonly due to diabetes or hypertension (16; 43.2%). Only one intracranial aneurysm was found. Symptoms included blurred vision (52; 43.7%), binocular diplopia (51; 42.8%), and eye pain (27; 22.7%). Fifty patients (42.0%) were referred by a general medical practitioner. Twenty-two (18.5%) were admitted to hospital. Forty-nine skull X-rays were requested and all were normal. Twenty-nine chest X-rays were requested. One (3.4%) showed an abnormality (carcinoma of the bronchus). Neurological patients present to ophthalmic casualty departments because of ophthalmic symptoms. Ophthalmic casualty officers are able to make working diagnoses and to direct patients appropriately. The use of investigations in the casualty department, however, is unlikely to be productive.
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PMID:Neurological problems presenting to an ophthalmic casualty department. 148 76

Several notifications of eye pain and blurred vision associated with treatment with nifedipine were received by New Zealand's Intensive Medicines Monitoring Programme. A questionnaire survey of patients taking nifedipine was undertaken to test the importance of these associations, with disturbance of taste associated with captopril taken as a methodological control. Altogether 961 patients taking nifedipine and 368 taking captopril were sent a questionnaire that asked whether any eye problems and changes in the sense of taste had occurred while they were taking the drug and whether these had resolved after treatment was stopped. Compliance was high: of 922 and 343 questionnaires that were assumed to have been delivered to patients taking nifedipine and captopril, respectively, 770 (84%) and 295 (86%) were returned satisfactorily completed. The distribution of sex was comparable in the two groups; patients taking captopril were slightly younger. Eye symptoms were reported in both groups, but eye pain was significantly more common in patients taking nifedipine (107 (14%) compared with 26 (9%) patients taking captopril). This is a new finding and may be related to ocular vasodilatation. Theoretically, glaucoma is a possible adverse reaction. Loss of taste was significantly associated with captopril, but no other disturbances of taste showed significant associations. Loss of taste persisted in 27 out of 35 patients who continued to take captopril and in three out of eight patients when the drug was withdrawn. This study showed a method of assessing early signs of adverse drug reactions, which has been used once before and identified previously unrecognised reactions.
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PMID:Eye pain with nifedipine and disturbance of taste with captopril: a mutually controlled study showing a method of postmarketing surveillance. 313 19

Two men were accidentally exposed to vapors of sarin, a cholinesterase inhibitor and extremely toxic nerve gas. Diagnosis was confirmed by depressed cholinesterase activity, and fixed extremely miotic pupils. No other signs or symptoms developed and neither man required treatment. Recovery to normal cholinesterase activity was gradual over a 90-day period. Pupillary reflexes were not detectable until 11 days after exposure; the miotic pupils dilated slowly over a 30-45 day-period. Eye pain and blurred vision did not occur; visual acuity and amplitude of accommodation were improved for several weeks. Other functions not affected significantly were intraocular pressure, visual fields, color vision, heterophorias, and vergences.
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PMID:Accidental exposure to sarin: vision effects. 397 1

Two pediatric patients with acute leukemia who developed optic nerve head leukemic infiltration are presented. In one patient both eyes were involved at diagnosis as well as her central nervous system. Despite systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy she lost her vision within a few weeks. Cranial irradiation at that point could not reverse this outcome. In the second patient optic nerve head infiltration was found a few months after diagnosis, treated promptly with cranial irradiation and her vision was saved. Her central nervous system (CNS) was not involved at any time. It is stressed that ocular complaints including eye pain or blurred vision in the pediatric patient with leukemia should be investigated without delay by an ophthalmologist. In the young child these complaints may be absent and change in the visual behavior should then alert the pediatric oncologist for possible ocular problems. If optic nerve head leukemic infiltration is diagnosed and promptly treated with emergency radiation, vision can be salvaged.
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PMID:Optic nerve head infiltration in acute leukemia in children: an indication for emergency optic nerve radiation therapy. 853 46

A 40-year-old Asian man, 6 months post renal transplant and receiving tacrolimus therapy, presented to the emergency department with a complaint of sudden-onset left eye pain with blurred vision, headache on the left side, and nausea and vomiting. On being admitted, the patient was intubated for respiratory depression, and erythromycin was initiated for suspected atypical pneumonia. Tacrolimus concentrations (whole blood) drawn on the 3rd day of hospitalization were reported to be > 60.0 ng/ml. Before hospitalization, tacrolimus concentrations were reported to be 9.8 ng/ml on a maintenance dose of 7 mg twice daily. Six days after discontinuation of erythromycin and a decrease in tacrolimus dose, the concentration decreased to 11.5 ng/ml and the original dose of tacrolimus was restarted. It is recommended that concurrent administration of erythromycin and tacrolimus be avoided. However, if concomitant therapy is necessary, tacrolimus concentrations, serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, and urine output should be monitored.
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PMID:Interaction between tacrolimus and erythromycin. 902 62

Autosomal dominant granular corneal dystrophy is a stromal corneal dystrophy characterized by discrete granular opacities that cause recurrent corneal erosion and blurred vision. Four different corneal dystrophies, including granular dystrophy, are caused by mutations of the BIGH3 gene. We report a case of autosomal dominant granular corneal dystrophy in a 45-year-old woman with bilateral blurred vision and recurrent eye pain since adolescence. Numerous diffuse granular opacities were found in the superficial stroma of the cornea. Her 3 sons had a similar history and clinical presentation. Autosomal dominant granular corneal dystrophy was diagnosed. Mutation analysis by single-strand conformation polymorphism and direct sequencing in 2 of the affected family members revealed R555W mutation in the BIGH3 gene. This independent R555W mutation has been previously found in different ethnic populations including Caucasians and Japanese with granular dystrophy of Groenouw type I. These findings indicate the importance of R555 amino acid in the pathogenesis of autosomal dominant granular corneal dystrophy.
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PMID:An autosomal dominant granular corneal dystrophy family associated with R555W mutation in the BIGH3 gene. 1270 42

Nitrogen mustards are analogous to sulfur mustard and have similar toxic effects on tissues. With the recent surge in terror activity, mustard could be used by terrorists. Recently a group of patients suffered from skin injury caused by hot fluid containing nitrogen mustard were treated. All the patients displayed eye symptoms such as eye pain, photophobia, excessive tearing, and blurred vision. One patient suffered from severe inhalation injury. Laboratory examination showed the decrease of white blood cell count, which may result from the loss of neutrophils. At the same time, platelets were at lower level during the first 8 days and gamma-glutamyltransferase (gamma-GT), a marker of oxidative stress, was significantly increased.
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PMID:Tissue injury by hot fluid containing nitrogen mustard. 1753 74

The near-vision triad, or complex, consists of convergence, miosis, and accommodation. Neuronal pathways that control each of these components are distinct but interrelated. Abnormalities affecting 1 or more components of the complex may present as eye pain, headache, blurred vision, or diplopia at near fixation. Although isolated abnormalities in any one of the components are common, a severe and concurrent defect in all three is rare.(1,2) We describe an 11-year-old child who presented with complete paralysis of the near triad without identifiable neurological defect. The child benefited from prism and plus lenses. To our knowledge, only three previous reports have described patients with idiopathic paralysis of convergence and accommodation in healthy children.(2-4) The methods we used to objectively confirm defects in the near-vision complex and rule out a psychogenic etiology may be instructive to other clinicians.
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PMID:Paralysis of the near-vision triad in a child. 1908 45

Brinzolamide is a white powder commercially formulated as a 1% ophthalmic suspension to reduce intraocular pressure (IOP). Pharmacologically, brinzolamide is a highly specific, non-competitive, reversible, and effective inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase II (CA-II), able to suppress formation of aqueous humor in the eye and thus to decrease IOP. Several clinical trials have evaluated its safety and the most commonly ocular adverse events are blurred vision (3%-8%), ocular discomfort (1.8%-5.9%), and eye pain (0.7%-4.0%). Brinzolamide has been introduced to treat ocular hypertension and primary open-angle glaucoma. In some clinical studies it has been estimated that brinzolamide reduced IOP by was about 18%. Brinzolamide can be added to beta-blockers and prostaglandins. In the latter combination, because prostaglandin derivatives improve the uveoscleral outflow but also increase the activity of CA in ciliary epithelium with a secondary increase in aqueous humor secretion, and slightly reduce the efficacy of prostaglandin analogues, theoretically topical CA inhibitors (CAI) decrease IOP by inhibiting CA-II, thus improving prostaglandin efficacy as well as lowering IOP. Brinzolamide could have a secondary possible effect on ocular flow too. Some clinical studies showed a mild improvement of ocular blood flow. Theoretically, CAI could give rise to metabolic acidosis, with secondary vasodilatation and improvement of blood flow. Systemic acidosis can occur in the setting of oral CAI therapy, and local acidosis within ocular tissues is theoretically possible with topical CAI therapy, with the potential for a local increase in ocular blood flow. In conclusion, topical CAI treatment has efficacy in IOP-lowering ranging from 15% to 20%. From published data, brinzolamide can be used as first-line medication, even if other medications have a higher efficacy, with few side effects and it is a good adjunctive treatment. In some type of glaucoma patients with a vascular dysregulation, topical CAI could have a double effect: reducing IOP and improving ocular blood flow.
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PMID:Brinzolamide ophthalmic suspension: a review of its pharmacology and use in the treatment of open angle glaucoma and ocular hypertension. 1966 49

In recent years the immunocompromised population has increased rapidly to include people with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), drug abusers, and transplant patients. Accordingly, the incidence of intracranial fungal infection has increased. Our institution experienced 2 cases of internal carotid artery (ICA) occlusion due to invasion of the cavernous sinus by an intracranial fungal infection. The first case was a 60-year-old man who presented with headache, eye pain, conjunctival injection, right-sided diplopia, and blurred vision. Infected tissues within the frontal and ethmoid sinuses were removed via bifrontal craniotomy and endoscopic sinus surgery through the Caldwell Luc approach. The second case was a 63-year-old woman who developed right-sided facial pain after a tooth extraction. The infection was not controlled despite continuous use of antifungal agents, resulting in death from sepsis. We believe that when intracranial fungal infection is suspected in a patient with orbital symptoms and a focal neurologic deficit, immediate angiographic investigation of possible ICA occlusion is warranted. Aggressive treatment with antifungal agents is the only way to improve prognosis.
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PMID:Occlusion of the Internal Carotid Artery due to Intracranial Fungal Infection. 2155 42


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