3rd Nerve Palsy Flashcards
What are the 7 syndromes
- nuclear palsy
- fasicular lesion
- uncal herniation syndrome
- posterior communications artery
- pupil sparing 3rd nerve palsy
- cavernous sinus syndrome/superior orbital fissure syndrome
- orbital syndrome
What is a nuclear palsy
- nuclear 3rd requires paresis of the contralateral SR
- nuclear 3rd has bilateral ptosis
4 syndromes associated with fasicular lesion
Benediks syndrome
- possible tremour
- dorsal lesion has palsy on the same side
Nothnagels syndrome
- lesion of superior cerebellar peduncle
- ipsilateral 3rd nerve palsy
- ipsilateral cerebellar ataxia
Webers syndrome
- dorsal lesion in cerebral peduncle
- ipsilateral 3rd and contralateral hemiplegia
Claude’s syndrome
- features of benedikts and nothnagels
What is uncal herniation syndrome
- 3rd nerve rests on tentorium cerebelli
- a tumour above this causes downward displacement and compresses the nerve
- dilated and fixed pupil, sign of space occupying lesion
Features of posterior communicating artery lesion
- circle of Willis, can balloon due to aneurysm
- can press on nerve causing palsy affecting pupil and lids
- severe headache
Pupil sparing 3rd nerve palsy
- pupilomotor fibres travel in outer layers of the nerve
- closer to nutrient supply
- 80% of ischemic 3rd nerve palsies have pupil sparing
- 95% of compressive palsies do not have pupil sparing
What is cavernous sinus syndrome/superior orbital fissure syndrome
- idiopathic granulomatous inflammation
- may cause painful ophthalmoplegia involves 4th, 3rd and 6th nerve
- tolosa-hunt syndrome
What is orbital syndrome
- unilateral palsy
- isolated palsy
- compression or vascular
- all unilateral palsy is orbital
- myasthenia gravis can mimik
Aetiologies
- ischemic
- tumours
- inflammatory conditions
- metabolic disorders
- ophthalmoplegic migraine
- trauma
- dental anaesthesia
Congenital 3rd features
- less common
- most unilateral
- ptosis and paresis
- miosed pupils
- absent or incomplete nerve nucleus
Management of congenital
- surgery of ptotic lid
- squint surgery
- poor prognosis
- prevention of stimulus deprivation amblyopia by ptosis
Management of acquired
- aetiology
- may have incomplete recovery
- review every 3/4 weeks
- fresnel prisms
- may require surgery
Surgery for 3rd nerve palsy
- large recession of LR up to 12mm, with large resection of MR
- SO tenectomy can reduce hypotropia
- transposition of vertical can reduce hypotropia
- nasal transposition of SO
- resection of vertical recti on opposite eye if vertical strabismus
- resect horizontal recti if persistent horizontal deviation
- ptosis is corrected after ocular alignment and sling procedure is best
Posterior communicating artery vs carotid artery
- carotid artery wont have pupil dilation if sympathetic fibres are affected