Results 231 to 240 of about 100,394 (298)
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Cranial-nerve palsies and vomiting

The Lancet, 1998
77538
Roberts, E   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Cranial Nerve Palsies

2013
This chapter describes the neuroanatomy and common lower cranial neuropathies, including clinical presentation, evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment of the following cranial nerves: trigeminal (fifth), facial (seventh), glossopharyngeal (ninth), vagus (tenth), spinal accessory (eleventh), and hypoglossal (twelfth).
Vita Grynova Kesner, Christina Fournier
openaire   +1 more source

Sensory ataxia with cranial nerve palsies

Practical Neurology, 2021
A previously independent 64-year-old man presented to his local hospital with new-onset diplopia and dysarthria while watching television. Over the following days, he developed painless perioral and upper limb sensory disturbance, gait unsteadiness and limb ataxia, most pronounced in the upper limbs.
Alexander, Grundmann   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Cranial Nerve Palsies

2015
The clinical features of superior oblique paresis vary widely depending on the type. Common features include an ipsilateral hypertropia that increases on contralateral gaze, and a positive head tilt test with the hypertropia increasing on head tilt to the side of the hypertropia.
Kenneth W. Wright, Yi Ning J. Strube
openaire   +1 more source

Facial Nerve Palsy

Emergency Neurology, 2020
Normal facial function plays a critical role in a person’s physical, psychological, and emotional makeup. Facial disfigurement can affect all these components and can result in social and vocational handicap.
Jennifer Siriwardane
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Pediatric Cranial Nerve Palsies

Journal of Pediatric Neurology, 2016
The diagnostic evaluation and treatment of children with cranial nerve palsies is markedly different from that of adults. Genetic, traumatic, inflammatory, and compressive etiologies are common. Unlike adults, vascular etiologies are rare. Treatment entails addressing factors such as amblyopia and fusion.
Paul Phillips, Brita Rook
openaire   +1 more source

Familial recurrent cranial nerve palsies

Acta Neurologica Scandinavica, 1988
Family cases of recurrent cranial nerve palsies are seldom reported. This paper presents a family with recurrent facial and ocular nerve palsies in 2 brothers. Their father and his sister had Bell's palsies. Examinations provided no explanation. Six previous reports of families with recurrent cranial nerve palsies are summarized. The pedigrees speak in
openaire   +2 more sources

Cranial nerve VI palsy (Abducens nerve)

Disease-a-Month, 2021
Catie, Thomas, Sherif, Dawood
openaire   +2 more sources

Traumatic Cranial Nerve Palsy

New England Journal of Medicine, 2005
A 19-year-old man sustained a crush injury to his skull from a piece of heavy machinery. Although on initial assessment he readily followed commands, his mental status deteriorated and he required intubation for airway protection. He was rapidly transferred to our level 1 trauma center. An examination of his pupils at his arrival showed ptosis (Panel A)
Christopher Baker, Jeremy Cannon
openaire   +1 more source

Third cranial nerve palsy in children

American Journal of Ophthalmology, 1999
To report the causes and the sensory, motor, and cosmetic results after treatment for oculomotor (third cranial nerve) palsy in children.Review of the clinical records of children with a diagnosis of third cranial nerve palsy followed up in a university-based pediatric ophthalmology practice between 1981 and 1996.Forty-nine children with 53 affected ...
L A, Schumacher-Feero   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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