Results 211 to 220 of about 16,419 (259)
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Not a microvascular sixth nerve palsy
Practical Neurology, 2007A 59-year-old man presented with a three-week history of double vision, worse on looking to the left. He also had non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, hypertension and hypercholesterolaemia. For the previous six months he had been experiencing daily left-sided frontal headaches, present on awakening but which resolved during the day; they were not ...
H, Steele +4 more
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Benign Recurrent Abducens (Sixth) Nerve Palsy
Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus, 2009Benign 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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MRI in isolated sixth nerve palsies
Neuroradiology, 2001In previous studies the origin of the majority of isolated sixth nerve palsies was not clear or was ascribed to vascular disease. Our purpose was determine how frequently a causative lesion was demonstrated on MRI in patients with an acute unilateral sixth nerve palsy. We performed a prospective study of 43 patients using a standardised protocol. In 27
M, Bendszus +7 more
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Archives of Neurology, 1976
Bilateral abducens nerve pareses were nearly as common as unilateral cases in an inpatient setting (125:143). Cerebrospinal fluid abnormalities were more frequent among the bilateral cases, but generally the same causes produced unilateral and bilateral sixth nerve palsy.
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Bilateral abducens nerve pareses were nearly as common as unilateral cases in an inpatient setting (125:143). Cerebrospinal fluid abnormalities were more frequent among the bilateral cases, but generally the same causes produced unilateral and bilateral sixth nerve palsy.
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Diplopia, Third Nerve Palsies, and Sixth Nerve Palsies
2012Ocular motor deficits are common clinical manifestations of neurological emergencies, with third (oculomotor) and sixth (abducens) paresis among the most frequent. This chapter focuses on recognition, diagnosis, and treatment of these cranial neuropathies in true neurological emergencies that carry a high risk of major morbidity or mortality if left ...
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2016
Sixth nerve palsy is a cause of incomitant esotropia that increases in the field of action of the paralytic lateral rectus muscle. Acquired palsies are much more common than congenital, and etiologies include trauma, neoplasm, elevated intracranial pressure, infection, and inflammation, as well as other miscellaneous and idiopathic causes.
Scott E. Olitsky, Timothy P. Lindquist
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Sixth nerve palsy is a cause of incomitant esotropia that increases in the field of action of the paralytic lateral rectus muscle. Acquired palsies are much more common than congenital, and etiologies include trauma, neoplasm, elevated intracranial pressure, infection, and inflammation, as well as other miscellaneous and idiopathic causes.
Scott E. Olitsky, Timothy P. Lindquist
openaire +1 more source

