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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 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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Abducens Nerve Palsy After Schwannoma Resection

The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 2015
Tumors of the posterior mediastinum are mostly neurogenic and could involve the intervertebral foramen and the medullary canal. We describe the case of a patient who underwent surgery for a nerve sheet tumor originating at the level of the right second neural root. Resection was associated with an incidental dural tear and cerebrospinal fluid leak that
Antonio, Bobbio   +4 more
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Acute abducens nerve palsy

Paediatrics and Child Health, 2007
PAEDIATRICS AND CHILD HEALTH 17:10 42 12–84 μg/g). There was no evidence of significant iron deposition, nor did he have evidence of fatty liver. Further autoantibody profiling (Institute of Liver Studies, King’s College London) for antibodies implicated in cryptogenic autoimmune hepatitis demonstrated negative anti-liver cytosol type 1 (anti-LC1) and ...
S. Sudhakaran, I. Abu-Arafeh
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Benign Recurrent Abducens (Sixth) Nerve Palsy

Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus, 2009
Benign recurrent abducens nerve palsy is rare. Twenty-three cases in children have been reported in the literature and many of these cases followed immunization or were associated with viral illness. Most of the reported patients share the following features: spontaneous recovery within 6 months, ipsilateral recurrence, and painless palsy.
Vedat, Okutan   +3 more
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Abducens Nerve Palsy Due to Neurovascular Compression

World Neurosurgery, 2023
Neurovascular compression (NVC) as the cause of abducens nerve palsy is an infrequent event. Only a small number of cases have been reported in the literature, and the efficacy of microvascular decompression (MVD) for abducens nerve palsy remains unclear.We reviewed previously reported cases of abducens nerve palsy caused by NVC and added our own cases.
Yukihiro Goto, Takuro Inoue
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Benign abducens nerve palsy of childhood

Pediatric Neurology, 1993
Benign acquired isolated abducens nerve palsy in infants and children is a rare condition and recurrence is even less common. The diagnosis is essentially one of exclusion. Six children (1 male, 5 females) are reported with benign isolated abducens nerve palsy, ranging in age from 8 months to 12 years (median: 5.5 years).
H A, Cohen   +4 more
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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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Traumatic Bilateral Abducens Nerve Palsy

Revista Sociedade Portuguesa de Oftalmologia, 2021
Introduction: Our purpose was to report a case of severe traumatic bilateral sixth nerve palsy. We describe a clinical case documented with photographs on different gazes; Hess screen charts and Goldmann visual field tests over time. Case Report: A 42-year-old male was involved in a high-energy car crash (240 km/h). Nine days after, when transferred to
Marta, Ana   +4 more
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