Isolated, monocular vertical nystagmus: single symptom of an extensive intracerebral tumor

2011 ◽  
Vol 42 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
V Haug ◽  
M von Rhein ◽  
K Frauenknecht ◽  
J Faber ◽  
B Reitter
2020 ◽  
Vol 267 (10) ◽  
pp. 2865-2870
Author(s):  
Torstein R. Meling ◽  
Aria Nouri ◽  
Adrien May ◽  
Nils Guinand ◽  
Maria Isabel Vargas ◽  
...  

Abstract Introduction CNS cavernomas are a type of raspberry-shaped vascular malformations that are typically asymptomatic, but can result in haemorrhage, neurological injury, and seizures. Here, we present a rare case of a brainstem cavernoma that was surgically resected whereafter an upbeat nystagmus presented postoperatively. Case report A 42-year old man presented with sudden-onset nausea, vomiting, vertigo, blurred vision, marked imbalance and difficulty swallowing. Neurological evaluation showed bilateral ataxia, generalized hyperreflexia with left-sided predominance, predominantly horizontal gaze evoked nystagmus on right and left gaze, slight left labial asymmetry, uvula deviation to the right, and tongue deviation to the left. MRI demonstrated a 13-mm cavernoma with haemorrhage and oedema in the medulla oblongata. Surgery was performed via a minimal-invasive, midline approach. Complete excision was confirmed on postoperative MRI. The patient recovered well and became almost neurologically intact. However, he complained of mainly vertical oscillopsia. The videonystagmography revealed a new-onset spontaneous upbeat nystagmus in all gaze directions, not suppressed by fixation. An injury of the rarely described intercalatus nucleus/nucleus of Roller is thought to be the cause. Conclusion Upbeat nystagmus can be related to several lesions of the brainstem, including the medial longitudinal fasciculus, the pons, and the dorsal medulla. To our knowledge, this is the first case of an iatrogenic lesion of the nucleus intercalatus/nucleus of Roller resulting in an upbeat vertical nystagmus. For neurologists, it is important to be aware of the function of this nucleus for assessment of clinical manifestations due to lesions within this region.


1975 ◽  
Vol 80 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simmons Lessell ◽  
Philip A. Wolf ◽  
David Chronley

1979 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel A. Schulman ◽  
William T. Shults ◽  
J. Mcandrew Jones

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaojuan Deng ◽  
Qingya Luo ◽  
Xiaolin Tang ◽  
Youqiang Chen ◽  
Chengyi Mao ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose Epithelioid glioblastoma (eGBM) is rare and a newly recognized subtype of GBM. Given the short of studies focusing on radiological characteristics of these tumors, we aimed to report the radiological features of eGBM deriving from six patients. Methods Six patients with pathologically diagnosed as eGBM were enrolled in this retrospective study. CT and pre-operative MR examinations with conventional and advanced sequences, such as diffusion weighted imaging and so on were analyzed. Immunohistological staining and mutation analysis of BRAF V600E was also explored. Results Only case 6 showed a co-locating tumor which was verified to be a diffuse astrocytoma (WHO II), other cases demonstrated single intracerebral tumor. Majority of the tumors originated in cerebral cortex, two cases involved corpus callosum. Tumors demonstrated iso-, hypo- or mixed intensity on T1WI, hyper- or mixed intensity on T2WI and FLAIR, heterogeneous enhancement on post-contrasted imaging. Involvement of leptomeninge, which appeared as leptomenigeal thickening and abnormal enhancing was discovered in 4 cases. Peritumoral edema (4/6) and hemorrhage (3/6) was common, calcium was only seen in case 5. Notable restrictive diffusion and consequently decreased rADC was found in solid component in 5 cases. Most cases demonstrated increased Cho and Lac/Lip value on 1H-MRS, and promoted rCBV value on PWI. The cases with CT examination showed an ill-defined mass with mixed density. Conclusions Although there are some overlaps between typical GBM and eGBM, some radiological characteristics, such as location (often in cerebral cortex), involvement of leptomeninge and intratumoral calcium, may support the diagnosis of eGBM.


2019 ◽  
Vol 90 (e7) ◽  
pp. A8.2-A8
Author(s):  
Allison S Young ◽  
Corinna Lechner ◽  
Andrew P Bradshaw ◽  
Hamish G MacDougall ◽  
Deborah A Black ◽  
...  

IntroductionThe diagnosis of vestibular disorders may be facilitated by analysing patient-initiated capture of ictal nystagmus.MethodsAdults with a history of recurrent vertigo were taught to self-record spontaneous and positional-nystagmus at home while symptomatic, using video-goggles. Patients with final diagnoses of disorders presenting with recurrent vertigo were analysed: 121 patients with Ménière’s Disease (MD), Vestibular Migraine (VM), Benign Positional Vertigo (BPV), Episodic Ataxia Type II (EAII), Vestibular Paroxysmia (VP) or Superior Semicircular Canal Dehiscence (SSCD) were included.ResultsOf 43 MD patients, 40 showed high-velocity spontaneous horizontal-nystagmus (median slow-phase velocity (SPV) 39.7 degrees/second (°/s); Twenty-one showed horizontal-nystagmus reversing direction within 12-hours (24 on separate days). In 44 of 67 patients with VM, low velocity spontaneous horizontal (n=28, 4.9°/s), up-beating (n=6, 15.5°/s) or down-beating-nystagmus (n=10, 5.1°/s) was observed; Sixteen showed positional-nystagmus only, and seven had no nystagmus. Spontaneous horizontal-nystagmus with SPV >12.05°/s had a sensitivity and specificity of 95.3% and 82.1% for MD. Nystagmus direction-change within 12-hours was highly specific (95.7%) for MD. Spontaneous vertical-nystagmus was highly specific (93.0%) for VM. In the seven BPV patients, spontaneous-nystagmus was absent or <3°/s, and characteristic paroxysmal positional nystagmus was observed in all cases. Patients with central and MD-related positional vertigo demonstrated persistent nystagmus. Two patients with EAII showed spontaneous vertical nystagmus, one patient with VP showed short bursts of horizontal-torsional nystagmus lasting 5–10s, and one patient with SSCD demonstrated paroxysmal torsional down-beating nystagmus when supine.ConclusionsPatient-initiated vestibular event-monitoring is feasible and could facilitate rapid and accurate diagnosis of episodic vestibular disorders.


Cancer ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 70 (8) ◽  
pp. 2149-2151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nabet G. Kasabian ◽  
Steven R. Previte ◽  
Harry D. Kaloustian ◽  
Emil I. Ganem

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