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      Parálisis bilateral del III nervio craneal por metástasis de carcinoma pulmonar Translated title: Bilateral third cranial nerve palsy secondary to lung carcinoma metastasis

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          Abstract

          Caso clínico: Un varón de 58 años, diagnosticado previamente de carcinoma pulmonar de células grandes, desarrolló una diplopía de carácter progresivo. En la exploración se objetivó una doble parálisis oculomotora con pupilas midriáticas y poco reactivas. En la resonancia magnética craneal se evidenció una metástasis única y solitaria a nivel mesencefálico, que afectaba a ambos núcleos y fascículos del III nervio craneal, en ausencia de más manifestaciones extratorácicas. Discusión: Este caso muestra la posibilidad de que un carcinoma pulmonar pueda causar una doble parálisis oculomotora como consecuencia de una metástasis solitaria de localización mesencefálica.

          Translated abstract

          Clinical Case: A 58 year-old man with a known diagnosis of a large cell lung carcinoma, developed a progressive diplopia. His examination revealed a double oculomotor nerve palsy with dilated and poorly reactive pupils. A cranial magnetic resonance showed an unique and solitary lesion in the midbrain, which presumably affected to both oculomotor nucleus and fasciculus. There were not found additional extrathoracic manifestations. Discussion: This case shows the possibility that a large cell lung carcinoma may cause a double oculomotor nerve palsy as the consequence of an isolated midbrain metastasis.

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          Bilateral Third Nerve Palsy and Temporal Arteritis

          Bilateral oculomotor palsy is a rare manifestation of temporal arteritis, and to our knowledge only 1 case has been described in the literature.
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            Isolated nuclear oculomotor nerve palsy due to a solitary midbrain metastasis: a rare presentation.

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              Oculomotor nerve palsy caused by lung cancer metastasis

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                aseo
                Archivos de la Sociedad Española de Oftalmología
                Arch Soc Esp Oftalmol
                Sociedad Española de Oftalmología (, , Spain )
                0365-6691
                August 2009
                : 84
                : 8
                : 399-401
                Affiliations
                [01] Madrid orgnameHospital de Madrid Norte-Sanchinarro orgdiv1Servicio de Oftalmología España
                Article
                S0365-66912009000800006
                10.4321/s0365-66912009000800006
                c9d237a4-b119-4000-9012-41bd97ceab56

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 International License.

                History
                : 25 August 2009
                : 10 September 2008
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 5, Pages: 3
                Product

                SciELO Spain


                III nervio craneal,parálisis,mesencéfalo,metástasis,carcinoma de células grandes de pulmón,Third cranial nerve,palsy,midbrain,metastasis,large cell lung carcinoma

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