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Horizontal gaze palsy with abducens nerve palsy and skew deviation. [PDF]
Shen T, Yu XY, Yan JH.
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Eight-and-a-Half Syndrome: A Case Report on a Rare Pontine Neuro-Ophthalmologic Presentation. [PDF]
Kumar Tyagi L, Singh M.
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Kawasaki Disease with Facial Nerve Paralysis
Pediatric Dermatology, 2003Abstract: Kawasaki disease (KD) is a multisystem disorder with varying clinical expression. We describe an instance of facial nerve paralysis in a patient with KD. A 5‐month‐old boy developed fever, irritability, and diarrhea, treated 8 days later with cefaclor and ibuprofen.
Margarita, Larralde +2 more
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Facial Nerve Palsy and Kawasaki Disease
The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 2013Kawasaki Disease (KD) is a vasculitic disease and can affect any organ system in the body. The development of coronary artery aneurysms is the most common and life threatening complication of KD and makes this disease the leading cause of acquired heart disease in children in the developed world.
Abdullah, Kocabaş +4 more
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Facial Nerve Palsy Complicating Kawasaki Disease
Pediatrics, 2008The diagnosis of Kawasaki disease, the most common cause of pediatric acquired heart disease, is difficult and often delayed for children whose age falls outside the typical range of 6 months to 5 years, especially in those with incomplete Kawasaki disease and atypical features.
Helen, Wright +4 more
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Electroneuronography in the Diagnosis and Prognosis of Diseases of the Facial Nerve
Acta Oto-Laryngologica, 1980Electroneuronography (ENoG) involves the recording of a summation potential of motor units provoked by an appropriate electrical stimulus. Degeneration (and obviously interruption) of a nerve fibre always means the denervation of all muscular fibres related to them.
G, Rossi, P, Solero
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Facial and vestibulocochlear nerve disease in six horse
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1983Summary In 6 horses, clinical signs of illness implicated a lesion involving the facial and vestibulocochlear nerves. One horse had signs of otitis externa. Five horses had radiographic changes primarily involving periosteal bony proliferation of the stylohyoid bone at its articulation with the temporal bone.
H T, Power, B J, Watrous, A, de Lahunta
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Facial Nerve Paralysis and Kawasaki Disease
Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1990A case of facial nerve paralysis in a patient with Kawasaki disease is described, and 17 cases in the literature are reviewed. A female predominance and a high rate of cardiovascular involvement were noted in patients with facial nerve paralysis and Kawasaki disease. The paralysis was self-limited, resolving without treatment in all surviving patients.
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