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Painful Ophthalmoplegia: The Tolusa-Hunt Syndrome
Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1978A 36-year-old man had the Tolusa-Hunt syndrome, an unusual cause of painful ophthalmoplegia with a neurologic deficit that may not be distinguishable from the many other disease processes that involve the orbital apex. Diagnosis was made by excluding the other causes, and there was a prompt response to high-dose steroid therapy, which prevents or ...
M E, Johns, R T, Wong
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Orbital phlebography in the diagnosis of painful ophthalmoplegia
Neuroradiology, 1975Three cases of painful ophthalmoplegia have been described in which symptoms suggesting a tumor of the orbit justified neuroradiological assessment. Phlebography in each case revealed stenosis of the superior ophthalmic vein in its third portion, and non-opicification of the cavernous sinus.
J, Julien +4 more
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Tropical and geographical medicine, 1978
A syndrome of acute periorbital pain, followed by the onset of ophthalmoplegia, has, in recent years, been recognised as a distinct entity. Six patients conforming to this clinical picture are presented from Zambia, and the characteristics of the syndrome is described.
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A syndrome of acute periorbital pain, followed by the onset of ophthalmoplegia, has, in recent years, been recognised as a distinct entity. Six patients conforming to this clinical picture are presented from Zambia, and the characteristics of the syndrome is described.
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Revue neurologique, 2005
Painful ophthalmoplegias have numerous etiologies and are often the presenting sign of a severe disease. Anatomic localization of the lesion is essential in interpreting neuroimaging.
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Painful ophthalmoplegias have numerous etiologies and are often the presenting sign of a severe disease. Anatomic localization of the lesion is essential in interpreting neuroimaging.
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Pain Characteristics of Painful Ophthalmoplegia (The Tolosa-Hunt Syndrome)
Cephalalgia, 1985Pain characteristics of the Tolosa-Hunt syndrome were abstracted from the observations of five patients with repeated incidents of painful ophthalmoplegia. The pain was experienced either as pressure behind the ophthalmoplegic eye or as boring pain in one orbital region, fluctuating in intensity, sometimes worsening to knife stab-like pain in the eye ...
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[A case of painful bilateral ophthalmoplegia].
Bulletin de la Societe belge d'ophtalmologie, 1997The authors present a case of Tolosa-Hunt syndrome with the particularity of a simultaneous palsy of both oculomotor nerves. The evolution is followed during 16 years. The clinical description, the criteria of the syndrome and the differential diagnosis are discussed.
A, Grun, P, Noel, M, Jager, A, Putteman
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[Painful ophthalmoplegia (author's transl)].
Acta neurologica Belgica, 1978The authors begin by enumerating the various syndromes in which painful ophthalmoplegia may be observed (sphenoidal fissure syndrome, Collier's syndrome, syndromes involving the orbital apex, the cavernous sinus and parasellar syndromes; Raeder's syndrome, Gradenigo's syndrome and Fischer-Brugge syndrome). They then discuss the various causes that must
J, Lapresle, M, Desi
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