oculomotor nerve palsy
Partial
oculomotor nerve palsy due to a basilar tip aneurysm. Basilar tip aneurysm.
Partial
oculomotor nerve palsy due to a basilar tip aneurysm. Basilar tip aneurysm (1) pressing on the root-entry zone of the left oculomotor nerve (2)
Oculomotor nerve palsies, or third nerve palsies, result in weakness of the muscles supplied by the oculomotor nerve, namely the superior rectus, inferior rectus, medial rectus, inferior oblique, and levator palpebrae superioris muscles.
Clinical presentation
Classically, patients present with diplopia and physical exam findings ipsilateral to the oculomotor nerve (CN III) lesion:
- "down and out" ocular positioning
- abduction, slight depression, and intorsion (due to paralysis of adduction, elevation, and depression)
- complete ptosis
- due to neuropathy affecting levator palpebrae superioris
- +/- enlarged unreactive pupil
- suggests compression of CN III, because the parasympathetic pupillary fibers are located peripherally in the nerve and are more likely affected by external compression
Pathology
It has numerous possible etiologies which can be divided according to which portion of the nerve is affected:
- dorsal midbrain (nuclear lesions): usually due to small regions of infarction; often no other neurological symptoms
- ventral midbrain (fascicular): Benedikt syndrome and Weber syndrome
- interpeduncular (subarachnoid)
- posterior communicating artery aneurysm
- rapidly enlarging with or without SAH is the most common cause, and usually involves only the oculomotor nerve
- ischemic involvement of the nerve will usually be pupil sparing whereas aneurysmal compression usually involves the pupil
- basal meningeal processes including infection, neoplastic infiltration, and inflammatory lesions (e.g. sarcoidosis) often involve additional cranial nerves
- posterior communicating artery aneurysm
- cavernous sinus portion
- neoplasms, most commonly pituitary macroadenomas extending into the sinus, meningiomas of the sella or sinus and any other sinus mass (e.g. trigeminal schwannomas) can compress the nerve against the interclinoid ligaments
- when the process is more diffuse, such as in cavernous sinus syndrome, other cranial nerves are also involved (e.g. Tolosa-Hunt syndrome)
- orbital portion
- usually there is associated proptosis or other focal orbital signs
- conditions include intraorbital tumors (optic nerve glioma, optic nerve meningioma) and inflammatory orbital pseudotumor
Treatment and prognosis
In post traumatic oculomotor nerve palsy, gaze movement training and steroid injections may be helpful .
See also
Siehe auch:
- Meningeom
- Sarkoidose
- Makroadenom Hypophyse
- Subarachnoidalblutung
- Exophthalmus
- trigeminal schwannoma
- Meningeom Nervus opticus
- Opticusgliom
- Orbitaspitzensyndrom
- Weber-Syndrom
und weiter:
Assoziationen und Differentialdiagnosen zu CN III palsy: