| Oculomotor nerve palsy | |
|---|---|
| Classification and external resources | |
Eye nerves diagram |
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| ICD-10 | H49.0 |
| ICD-9 | 378.52 |
| DiseasesDB | 2861 |
| eMedicine | oph/183 |
| MeSH | D015840 |
Oculomotor nerve palsy is an eye condition resulting from damage to the third cranial nerve or a branch thereof. As the name suggests, the oculomotor nerve supplies the majority of the muscles controlling eye movements. Thus, damage to this nerve will result in the affected individual being unable to move their eye normally. In addition, the nerve also supplies the upper eyelid muscle (Levator palpebrae superioris) and the muscles responsible for pupil constriction (sphincter pupillae) . The limitations of eye movements resulting from the condition are generally so severe that the affected individual is unable to maintain normal alignment of their eyes when looking straight ahead, leading to strabismus and, as a consequence, double vision (diplopia).
It is also known as "Oculomotor neuropathy".[1]
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Contents
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A complete Oculomotor nerve palsy will result in a characteristic down and out position in the affected eye. The eye will be displaced downward, because the superior oblique (innervated by the fourth cranial or trochlear nerve), is unantagonized by the paralyzed superior rectus and inferior oblique and displaced outward, because the lateral rectus (innervated by the sixth or abducens cranial nerve) is unantagonized by the paralyzed medial rectus. The affected individual will also have a ptosis, or drooping of the eyelid, and pupil dilation.
It should be borne in mind, however, that the branched structure of the oculomotor nerve means that damage sustained at different points along its pathway, or damage caused in different ways (compression versus loss of blood supply, for example), will result in different muscle groups or, indeed, different individual muscles being affected, thus producing different presentation patterns.
Oculomotor palsy can arise as a result of a number of different conditions.
The origins of the vast majority of congenital oculomotor palsies are unknown, or idiopathic to use the medical term. There is some evidence of a familial tendency to the condition, particularly to a partial palsy involving the superior division of the nerve with an autosomal recessive inheritance. The condition can also result from aplasia or hypoplasia of one or more of the muscles supplied by the oculomotor nerve. It can also occur as a consequence of severe birth trauma.
Ischemic insult selectively affects somatic fibers over parasympathetic fibers, while traumatic insult affects both types more equally. Therefore, while almost all forms cause ptosis and impaired movement of the eye, pupillary abnormalities are more commonly associated with trauma than with ischemia.
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