Diplopia differential diagnosis: Difference between revisions
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| colspan="1" rowspan="3" |Palsies of the third, fourth or sixth cranial nerves | | colspan="1" rowspan="3" |Palsies of the third, fourth or sixth cranial nerves | ||
| colspan="1" rowspan="1" |Oculomotor nerve palsy | | colspan="1" rowspan="1" |Oculomotor nerve palsy | ||
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* Microvascular ischemia: | * Microvascular ischemia: | ||
** Diabetic neuropathy | ** Diabetic neuropathy | ||
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* Multiple sclerosis | * Multiple sclerosis | ||
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* Muscles affected: | |||
** Medial, inferiorn superior rectii | |||
** Inferior oblique muscle | |||
** Levator palpebrae muscle | |||
** Ciliary and constrictor pupillae muscles | |||
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* Multi-directional horizantal and vertical diplopia | |||
* No diplopia on lateral gaze to the affected side | |||
* Eyelid droop (ptosis) | |||
* Down and out pupil | |||
* Pupillary dilation | |||
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|Trochlear nerve palsy | |||
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* Muscles affected: | |||
** Superior oblique muscle | |||
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* Rotational diplopia that is worse on looking downwards and towards the nose | |||
* Extorsion on downward gaze | |||
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|Abducens nerve palsy | |Abducens nerve palsy | ||
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* Muscles affected: | |||
** Lateral rectus muscle | |||
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* Horizontal diplopia on gaze towards the affected side | |||
* Lateral gaze palsy | |||
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| colspan="1" rowspan="4" |Central nervous system injury (pathways and cranial nerve nuclei) | | colspan="1" rowspan="4" |Central nervous system injury (pathways and cranial nerve nuclei) |
Revision as of 22:49, 17 February 2019
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief:
Overview
Diplopia may be caused by disorders of the orbit, extraocular muscles, neuromuscular junction dysfuntion, paralysis of the oculomotor, trochlear and abducens nerves, and injuries affecting the central nervous system (CNS). Given the various causes of diplopia, it is important to differentiate between the different causes that lead to diplopia.
Differentiating Diplopia From Other Diseases
Diplopia may be caused by disorders of the orbit, extraocular muscles, neuromuscular junction dysfuntion, paralysis of the oculomotor, trochlear and abducens nerves, and injuries affecting the central nervous system (CNS). Given the various causes of diplopia, it is important to differentiate between the different causes that lead to diplopia. The following table differentiates between various causes of diplopia:
Dilopia causing disorder | Subcategory | Mechanism | Distinguising Features | Exam Findings |
Orbital disorder | Trauma |
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Orbital apex mass |
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Orbital cellulitis |
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Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (Grave's disease) |
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Extraocular muscle disorder | Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy due to ocular surgery | |||
Extraocular muscle injury or hematoma | ||||
Congenital myopathie | ||||
Mitochondrial myopathies, | ||||
Muscular dystrophy | ||||
Neuromuscular junction dysfunction | Myasthenia gravis |
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Botulism |
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Palsies of the third, fourth or sixth cranial nerves | Oculomotor nerve palsy |
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Trochlear nerve palsy |
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Abducens nerve palsy |
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Central nervous system injury (pathways and cranial nerve nuclei) | Basilar artery thrombosis |
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Vertebral dissection |
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Aneurysm |
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Wernicke's encephalopathy |
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