| Literature DB >> 23799169 |
Dae Woo Kim1, Hee-Young Sohn, Sea-Yuong Jeon, Jin-Pyeong Kim, Seong-Ki Ahn, Jung Je Park, Seung Hoon Woo, Dong Gu Hur.
Abstract
A 56-year-old male was admitted with an acute headache and sudden ptosis on the right side. No ophthalmological or neurological etiologies were apparent. A mucocele of the right posterior ethmoid sinus was observed with radiology. After the marsupialization of the mucocele via a transnasal endoscopic approach, the patient's symptoms (oculomotor nerve paralysis and headache) resolved in 4 weeks. Oculomotor paralysis is a rare symptom of an ethmoidal mucocele. In this article, we report this rare case along with a literature review.Entities:
Keywords: Blepharoptosis; Mucocele; Oculomotor nerve
Year: 2011 PMID: 23799169 PMCID: PMC3687058 DOI: 10.3342/ceo.2013.6.2.103
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 1976-8710 Impact factor: 3.372
Fig. 1Preoperative photodocumentation. The arrow indicates ptosis of the right eyelid.
Fig. 2Preoperative images. (A) Two coronal images of computed tomography without enhancement. A small mucocele was found in the right posterior ethmoid sinus (left). The arrow indicates the erosion of lamina papyracea (right). (B) T2 weighted magnetic resonance image. The arrow indicates the mucocele in the posterior ethmoidal sinus. (C) A simple illustration of the magnetic resonance imaging image. The arrow indicates the suggestive oculomotor nerve pathway from the brainstem. The mucocele resides where the oculomotor nerve spreads its branches superiorly and inferiorly to the external ocular muscles.
Cases presenting with isolated oculomotor nerve paralysis due to sinonasal mucocele published in the English literature