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Isolated abducens nerve palsy due to pituitary apoplexy after mild head trauma

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Date

2015

Author

Kayayurt, Kamil
Gündoğdu, Ömer Lütfi
Yavaşi, Özcan
Metin, Yavuz
Uğraş, Erhan

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Kayayurt, K., Gündogdu, Ö. L., Yavaşi, Ö., Metin, Y., & Ugras, E. (2015). Isolated abducens nerve palsy due to pituitary apoplexy after mild head trauma. The American journal of emergency medicine, 33(10), . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajem.2015.07.066

Abstract

Pituitary apoplexy is a relatively rare condition. Cranial nerve palsies may develop due to compression of the surrounding structures by the rapidly expanding tumor. While the most commonly affected nerve is the oculomotor nerve, abducens nerve palsy may also occur less commonly. A 68-year-old male patient was admitted to the emergency department with complaints of severe headache, nausea, vomiting, and diplopia after head trauma due to falling. His magnetic resonance imaging evaluation demonstrated a large pituitary adenoma and bleeding into the tumor, which was acutely expanding and leading to compression of the abducens nerve laterally. Isolated abducens palsy due to posttraumatic pituitary apoplexy is a rare clinical condition, and as the symptoms and signs are nonspecific, it can commonly remain clinically undiagnosed. in this article, our aim was to draw attention to a clinical condition in which unfavorable complications may develop if the diagnosis is overlooked.

Source

American Journal of Emergency Medicine

Volume

33

Issue

10

URI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajem.2015.07.066
https://hdl.handle.net/11436/2759

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