Some more reports of studies on the management of oculomotor nerve lesion are described below.

Acquired oculomotor paralysis: a new therapeutic approach. Apropos of 10 cases]

El Mansouri Y, Bentahar H, Laouissi N, Zaghloul K, Amraoui A.

Service d'Ophtalmologie, Hopital 20 Aout 1953, CHU Ibn Rochd, Casablanca, Maroc.

PURPOSE: The aim of this work is to report our rehabilitation scheme and outcome in patients with acquired oculomotor palsy. PATIENTS AND METHODS: We cared for 10 patients with oculomotor palsy between January 1996 and March 1998 at the Casablanca University Hospital. Our orthoptic rehabilitation scheme was based on reinforcing the patient's sensorial potential using a prism dioper and motor capacities by soliciting vergency and version movements. RESULTS: The 10 patients (7 males, 3 females, mean age 39.5 years) had unilateral IV palsy (n =3), bilateral IV palsy (n= 1), unilateral VI palsy (n= 2), bilateral VI palsy (n= 1), partial unilateral III palsy (n= 1) and dissociated bilateral III palsy (n= 2). Mean delay to initiation of rehabilitation was 49 days and mean duration for treatment was 3 months. We achieved total recovery in 50% of the cases and partial recovery in 40%. Intermittent diplopia persisted in 10 per thousand of the cases. These results differ slightly from those in the literature where total regression is reported in about 50% of the patients after therapeutic abstention. CONCLUSION: This small series is insufficient to validate our method. The results obtained do however show that rehabilitation is safe and should be applied more widely in patients with oculomotor palsy.



J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2002 Apr;72(4):517-22. Related Articles, Links
Concurrent excitatory and inhibitory effects of high frequency stimulation: an oculomotor study.

Bejjani BP, Arnulf I, Houeto JL, Milea D, Demeret S, Pidoux B, Damier P, Cornu P, Dormont D, Agid Y.

Centre d'Investigation Clinique, Federation de Neurologie, and INSERM U289, France.

OBJECTIVE: To describe a reversible neurological condition resembling a crossed midbrain syndrome resulting from high frequency stimulation (HFS) in the midbrain. METHODS: Postoperative evaluation of quadripolar electrodes implanted in the area of the subthalamic nucleus of 25 patients with Wikipedia reference-linkParkinson's disease (PD) successfully treated by HFS. RESULTS: Four of the 25 patients experienced reversible acute diplopia, with dystonic posture and tremor in the contralateral upper limb when the white matter between the red nucleus and the substantia nigra was stimulated. The motor signs resembled those caused by lesions of the red nucleus. The ipsilateral resting eye position was "in and down" (three patients) or "in" (one patient). Enophthalmos was seen. Abduction was impaired and vertical eye movements were limited, but adduction was spared. The movements of the controlateral eye were normal. The ocular signs could be best explained by sustained hyperactivity of the extrinsic oculomotor nerve. Simultaneous tonic contraction of the superior rectus, the inferior rectus, and inferior oblique may cause the enophthalmos and partial limitation of upward and downward eye movements. Antagonist tonic contraction of the ipsilateral medial rectus severely impairs abduction. CONCLUSION: This crossed midbrain syndrome, possibly resulting from simultaneous activation of oculomotor nerve and lesion-like inhibition of the red nucleus suggests that high frequency stimulation has opposite effects on grey and white matter.