Diplopia and Oculomotor Palsies Flashcards
Single most common isolated oculomotor palsy
Sixth nerve palsy
This is because it can be produced both by ischemia and by simple nerve compression in the setting if elevated ICP!
Most common cause of a sixth nerve palsy
Vascular
Don’t let the association with ICP fool you, the most common isolated 6th nerve palsy is still vascular! But mass lesion should be on your radar.
6th nerve palsy and aneurysms
PICA aneurysms and basilar artery aneurysms can both compress the nerve
Where is the 6th nerve impinged in elevated ICP?
The petrous temporal ridge
Binocular vs monocular diplopia
Binocular: An oculomotor misalignment problem. Resolved by covering one eye.
Monocular: Either a diffraction problem (lens, aqueous humor, vitreous humor) OR an occipital lobe problem (neurodegenerative disease, seizure)
Common causes of oculomotor deficits
-
Vascular
- Pressure, A1c
-
Rheumatologic
- ANA, ESR, CRP
-
Infectious
- CBC
Treatment of an occulomotor palsy
- Correction of underlying risk factors
- Obsereve empirically for 1-3 months for improvement
- Patching of involved eye may alleviate symptoms
- Eyeglasses made with prism lens may minimize or correct diplopia during recovery
- Interventions:
- Injection of botox into antagonist muscle (lasts 3-6 months)
- Strabismus surgery on the extraocular muscle may be necessary in non-resolving cases
Monocular diplopia is usually ___-trinsic while binocular diplopia is usually ___-trinsic
Monocular diplopia is usually IN-trinsic while binocular diplopia is usually EX-trinsic