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      Bilateral Abducent Nerve Palsy After Neck Trauma: A Case Report

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          Abstract

          Introduction

          The abducent nucleus is located in the upper part of the rhomboid fossa beneath the fourth ventricle in the caudal portion of the pons. The abducent nerve courses from its nucleus, to innervate the lateral rectus muscle. This nerve has the longest subarachnoid course of all the cranial nerves, it is the cranial nerve most vulnerable to trauma. It has been reported that 1% to 2.7% of all head injuries are followed by unilateral abducent palsy, but bilateral abducent nerve palsy is extremely rare.

          Case Presentation

          A 65-year-old woman presented to the emergency department following a motor vehicle accident. A neurological assessment showed the patient’s Glascow coma scale (GCS) to be 15. She complained of double vision, and we found lateral gaze palsy in both eyes. A hangman fracture type IIA (C2 fracture with posterior ligamentous C1 - C2 distraction) was found on the cervical CT scan. A three-month follow-up of the patient showed complete recovery of the abducent nerve.

          Conclusions

          Conservative treatment is usually recommended for traumatic bilateral abducent nerve palsy. Our patient recovered from this condition after three months without any remaining neurological deficit, a very rare outcome in a rare case.

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          Most cited references17

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          Incidence, associations, and evaluation of sixth nerve palsy using a population-based method.

          To determine the incidence of sixth nerve palsy in a population-based study, with particular emphasis on associated coexisting medical conditions and to use these data to develop a management algorithm. Retrospective, population-based case series. All residents of Olmsted County, Minnesota, USA, diagnosed with sixth nerve palsy between January 1, 1978 and December 31, 1992. All cases were identified by using the Rochester Epidemiology Project medical records linkage system, which captures all patient-physician encounters in Olmsted County. The entire medical record of each patient was reviewed to confirm the diagnosis, document county residency, and to determine associated medical conditions. We used stringent predetermined criteria to define diabetes mellitus and hypertension as associations. Incidence rates were adjusted to the age and gender distribution of the 1990 white population in the United States. Etiology or systemic associations of the palsy. We identified 137 new cases of sixth nerve palsy over the 15-year period. The age- and gender-adjusted annual incidence of sixth nerve palsy was 11.3/100 000 (95% confidence interval, 9.3-13.2/100 000). Causes and associations were: undetermined (26%), hypertension alone (19%), coexistent hypertension and diabetes (12%), trauma (12%), multiple sclerosis (7%), neoplasm (5%), diabetes alone (4%), cerebrovascular accident (4%), postneurosurgery (3%), aneurysm (2%), and other (8%). When sixth nerve palsy was the presenting sign in cases of neoplasm (n = 1) and aneurysm (n = 3), history and examination revealed the presence of other neurologic symptoms or signs. We provide population-based data on the incidence of sixth nerve palsy with a notably lower incidence of neoplasm and higher incidence of diabetes and hypertension than previous institution-based series. We suggest that patients with nontraumatic neurologically isolated sixth nerve palsy may undergo a focused medical evaluation followed by close observation, whereas non-neurologically isolated cases warrant a full neurologic evaluation, including prompt neuroimaging.
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            Review of a series with abducens nerve palsy.

            In this report, we aimed to investigate the patients that presented at our clinic complaint with diplopia due to the abducens nerve palsy and neurosurgical disease. The study design was a retrospective review of ten cases with the abducens nerve palsy. The causes of the abducens nerve paralysis of our patients were as follows: two cases with head trauma, three cases with pituitary tumors, one case with sphenoid sinus mucocele, one case with greater superficial petrosal nerve cellular schwannoma at the petrous apex, one case with hypertensive intraventricular hemmorhage, one case with hydrocephalus, and one case with parotid tumor and skull base/brain stem invasion. Depending on the location of the lesion, the symptoms due to nuclear damage showed no improvement as in our case with adenocarcinoma of the parotid gland. The lesions sited at the subarachnoid portion of the abducens nerve or in the cavernous sinus, the abducens nerve palsy improved or botilinum injection was performed during recovery period. We presented abducens nerve palsy cases due to neruosurgical disorders. A botilinum injection was performed in three patients with the abducens palsy. Botilinum injection can help patients with sixth nerve palsy during the recovery period.
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              Spontaneous recovery rate in traumatic sixth-nerve palsy.

              To estimate the spontaneous recovery rate of isolated traumatic sixth-nerve palsy.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Trauma Mon
                Trauma Mon
                10.5812/traumamon
                Kowsar
                Trauma Monthly
                Kowsar
                2251-7464
                2251-7472
                06 February 2016
                February 2016
                : 21
                : 1
                : e31984
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Emergency Department, Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari, IR Iran
                [2 ]Department of Neurosurjury, Orthopedics Research Center, Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari, IR Iran
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author: Sajad Shafiee, Department of Neurosurjury, Orthopedics Research Center, Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari, IR Iran. Tel: +98-9123798073, Fax: +98-1133350670, E-mail: sajad.shafiee@ 123456gmail.com
                Article
                10.5812/traumamon.31984
                4869415
                27218062
                4470af70-56d2-473c-b6fe-79d8afa43e2f
                Copyright © 2016, Trauma Monthly

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits copy and redistribute the material just in noncommercial usages, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 01 October 2015
                : 24 November 2015
                : 20 December 2015
                Categories
                Case Report

                head trauma,abducent nerve palsy,ligamentous injury
                head trauma, abducent nerve palsy, ligamentous injury

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