A patient presents with a droopy right upper lid of sudden onset; when he holds lid up he sees double. What are 5 important questions to ask a patient with double vision?
What is meant by binocular diplopia?
Caused by ocular misalignment that resolves when either eye is closed
What are the causes of binocular diplopia?
Anything that stops coordinated movement of the two eyes, including paralytic squints due to CN palsies which can have sinister intracranial causes
What is monocular diplopia?
What are the causes of monocular diplopia?
Problems in ocular media e.g. cataract
What are 3 key differences between monocular and binocular double vision?
What are 2 examinations that should be performed in a patient with double vision?
What are 3 clinical features on examination (extraocular movements, observation) present in CNIII palsy?
What is the anatomical course of the third nerve?
What does the superior branch of the oculomotor nerve supply?
superior rectus and levator palpebrae superioris muscles
What does the inferior branch of the oculomotor nerve supply?
Medial rectus, inferior rectus and inferior oblique muscles
Also supplies pre-ganglionic sympathetic fibres to the ciliary ganglion, which innervates sphincter pupillae and ciliary muscles
Why is there a ptosis in CNIII palsy?
How can the eye movements be explained in CNIII palsy?
What are the 2 types of oculomotor nerve palsy?
What is one way to differentiate between medical and surgical causes of oculomotor nerve palsy?
Pupil examination: the fibres of the oculomotor nerve that are needed for pupil constriction are superficial fibres.
Therefore pupil involved (fixed dilated pupil) is more likely to be seen in surgical cause rather than medical (not infallible)
What are 3 investigations that are appropriate in suspected oculomotor nerve palsy?
Why is CTA/MRA preferable to plain CT?
large aneurysms and intracranial blood from subarachnoid haemorrhage will be visible but may miss smaller aneurysms so can’t exclude aneurysm
What are the pros and cons of a CT angiogram, and what is an alternative?
CTA is gold standard as will show almost all aneurysms
Risk of complications from contrast agent and requires more technical expertise to perform and interpret
MRA is a less invasive alternative
What is the management of a surgical cause of CNIII palsy (i.e. posterior communicating artery aneurysm)?
Neurosurgical management: clipping/gluing/coiling/wrapping berry aneurysm
What is the management of a medical cause of CNIII palsy?
What will usually happen following medical third nerve palsy?
Ptsos and diplopia will improve as blood supply to nerve improves. Failure to improve or deterioration should call diagnosis into question, prompt re-investigation
What are 2 possible treatment options in cases there there is a permanent third nerve palsy?
What do botulinum toxin injections to treat third nerve palsy involve?
Use an electrode-guided needle into the lateral rectus, paralyses muscle and pulls eye back to centre; may resolve diplopia in primary position and prevents contracture of muscle
How long does the effect of a botulinum toxin injection for third nerve palsy last and what can be done?
wears off in about 3 months but can be repeated