Results 211 to 220 of about 42,279 (261)
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Neurinoma of the Abducens Nerve

Neurosurgery, 1981
abstract A patient presented with signs of increased intracranial pressure and a right 6th nerve paresis. The diagnostic evaluation with ventriculography indicated a tumor of the right cerebellopontine angle. At operation a neurinoma arising from the right 6th nerve was encountered.
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The abducens nerve

Journal of Neurosurgery, 1974
✓ The authors describe the origins and course of the sixth cranial nerve in 62 cadaver or autopsy cases and describe three patterns. In Pattern 1 the nerve originates and runs all its way as a single trunk. In Pattern 2 it originates as a single trunk, but splits into two branches in the subarachnoid space, while in Pattern 3 it originates as two ...
H, Nathan, G, Ouaknine, I Z, Kosary
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Cranial nerve VI palsy (Abducens nerve)

Disease-a-Month, 2021
Catie, Thomas, Sherif, Dawood
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Supernumerary Abducens Nerves: A Comprehensive Review

World Neurosurgery, 2018
Branching and/or replication of the abducens nerve is not an uncommon occurrence. Although numerous variations have been documented, the rarest forms are duplicated or triplicated nerves, where multiple nerve roots originate from the brainstem, travel intracranially, and attach to the lateral rectus as separate entities.We conducted a systematic ...
Joy M H, Wang   +4 more
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Abducens nerve palsy after orbital decompression

Orbit, 2017
Double vision after decompression surgery for Thyroid Eye Disease (TED) is well described in the literature and the incidence ranges from 0 to 64%. The Mechanisms for new onset diplopia after orbital decompression are poorly understood. Common theories include: Fibrosis of muscles, displacement of the muscle cone, and reactivation of the TED.We present
Shani, Golan, Robert A, Goldberg
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Traumatic Abducens Nerve Palsy

New England Journal of Medicine, 2012
A 73-year-old woman presented with diplopia after a fall onto the left side of her face. She had not lost consciousness.
Farzad Borumandi, Alexander Gaggl
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Abducens (VIth) nerve palsy

2015
Abstract This is a chapter on Abducens (VIth) nerve palsy from the Eyes/Eye Movements section of A Manual of Neurological Signs. Most of the chapters contain a description of the sign, associated signs, and cases, supported by clinical videos and figures.
John G. Morris, Padraic J. Grattan-Smith
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Posttraumatic abducens to oculomotor nerve misdirection

Journal of American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus, 2005
Paradoxical patterns of extraocular muscle, eyelid, or pupillary movements can occur following injury between divisions of the oculomotor nerve, trigeminal and abducens nerves, and trigeminal and oculomotor nerves. We report three cases of unusual ocular motility and eyelid movements that are a result of aberrant connections between the abducens and ...
Edward G, Buckley   +3 more
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Abducens Nerve Palsy

2022
Guohong Tian, Xinghuai Sun, Chen Zhao
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