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Cranial Nerve Palsies

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CN III Palsy - The Droopy Director

  • Causes:
    • Microvascular (DM, HTN): Pupil often spared.
    • Compressive (PCOM aneurysm, tumor): Pupil often involved. ⚠️
    • Trauma.
  • Signs:
    • Ptosis (droopy eyelid).
    • Eye "down and out".
    • Mydriasis (dilated pupil; if parasympathetic fibers hit).
    • Diplopia. CN III Palsy: Ptosis, Mydriasis, Eye Down and Out
  • Pupil:
    • Sparing: Ischemia likely.
    • Involved: Urgent imaging (aneurysm?).

⭐ A pupil-involving CN III palsy suggests a compressive lesion like a PCOM aneurysm.

CN IV Palsy - The Tilted Viewer

  • Etiology: Trauma (most common), congenital, vascular (DM, HTN), tumor, idiopathic.
  • Clinical Features:
    • Vertical/torsional diplopia: worse on downgaze & contralateral gaze (e.g., reading, descending stairs).
    • Compensatory head tilt to the shoulder opposite the lesion.
  • Examination:
    • Parks-Bielschowsky 3-step test to isolate paretic Superior Oblique (SO).
    • Affected eye shows hypertropia, worsening on adduction & ipsilateral head tilt. Parks-Bielschowsky test for CN IV palsy

⭐ Patients characteristically tilt their head AWAY from the side of the lesion (towards the contralateral shoulder) to minimize diplopia_._

CN VI Palsy - The Sideways Straggler

  • Nerve: Abducens (CN VI). Muscle: Lateral Rectus (LR). Action: Abduction (outward eye movement).
  • Symptoms:
    • Horizontal, uncrossed diplopia; worse on ipsilateral gaze & for distance.
    • Esotropia (eye turns inward), more pronounced on attempted abduction.
    • Compensatory head turn towards the side of palsy to maintain binocular vision.
  • Common Causes:
    • Microvascular (diabetes, hypertension) in older adults (>50 yrs).
    • Trauma.
    • ↑ Intracranial Pressure (ICP).
    • Tumors (e.g., pontine glioma, nasopharyngeal carcinoma), inflammation.

⭐ Sixth nerve palsy can be a "false localizing sign," indicating raised intracranial pressure (ICP) due to its long, vulnerable intracranial course over the petrous apex, rather than a direct lesion of the nerve nucleus or fascicle at that specific ICP-related site of injury (e.g., Dorello's canal).

Combined Palsies - The Cranial Crowd

  • Multiple CN palsies localize lesion.
  • Cavernous Sinus Syndrome:
    • III, IV, V1, V2, VI, sympathetics.
    • Proptosis, ophthalmoplegia, facial sensory loss (V1/V2).
    • Causes: Tumor, fistula, inflammation.
  • Superior Orbital Fissure (SOF) Syndrome:
    • III, IV, V1, VI. (V2 spared vs. Cavernous Sinus)
  • Orbital Apex Syndrome:
    • SOF nerves + II (optic neuropathy → ↓vision).
    • E.g., Tolosa-Hunt (painful ophthalmoplegia, steroid-responsive).
  • Gradenigo's Syndrome:
    • VI palsy, V pain (V1/V2), petrous apicitis. Cavernous sinus and cranial nerves III, IV, V, VI

⭐ Tolosa-Hunt syndrome: painful ophthalmoplegia from granulomatous inflammation (cavernous sinus/SOF), responds to steroids.

Cranial Nerve Palsy Workup - The Neuro-Op Toolkit

  • History: Onset (sudden/gradual), progression, trauma, pain, diplopia, ptosis, associated neurological/systemic symptoms.
  • Examination:
    • Visual Acuity, Visual Fields, Pupils (RAPD, size, reactivity).
    • Ocular Motility (versions, ductions), Cover tests, Lid position.
    • Fundoscopy (optic disc), Exophthalmometry.
    • Complete neurological & relevant systemic exam.
  • Investigations (Clinical-Guided):
    • Bloods: CBC, ESR/CRP, Glucose/HbA1c, TFTs, AChR-Ab.
    • Imaging: MRI (brain/orbits) ± MRA/MRV; CT (trauma).
    • LP (infection/inflammation).
    • Tensilon/Ice pack test (Myasthenia).

⭐ In an isolated CN III palsy, pupillary involvement (mydriasis) is a red flag for a compressive lesion (e.g., PCOM aneurysm) until proven otherwise; pupillary sparing often points to microvascular ischemia (e.g., diabetes, hypertension).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • CN III palsy: Ptosis, mydriasis, "down and out" eye. Pupil involved = compressive (aneurysm); pupil spared = ischemic.
  • CN IV palsy: Vertical diplopia, worse on contralateral gaze & ipsilateral head tilt. Head tilt away from lesion.
  • CN VI palsy: Horizontal diplopia, worse on ipsilateral gaze (abduction failure). Vulnerable to ↑ICP.
  • Painful ophthalmoplegia: Suspect PCOM aneurysm, Tolosa-Hunt, or GCA.
  • Aberrant regeneration CN III: Lid-gaze dyskinesis after compressive injury, not ischemic.
  • Multiple palsies: Think cavernous sinus, orbital apex, or brainstem.

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