Cases reported "Conjunctival Diseases"

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1/65. Ocular filariasis: not strictly tropical.

    A 65-year-old man consulted for a discomfort in the right eye that had suddenly appeared the evening before. The examination revealed a white worm localized under the temporal bulbar conjunctiva. After extraction, the parasitological characteristics identified the worm as dirofilaria repens (Nochtiella subgenus). This is a parasite of canids and felids, usually nonpathogenic to humans, but which can be transmitted through mosquito bites, especially around the Mediterranean basin. The simple extraction of the worm, encysted under the skin or under the conjunctiva, cures the patient.
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ranking = 1
keywords = discomfort
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2/65. Functional magnetic resonance imaging in spontaneous attacks of SUNCT: short-lasting neuralgiform headache with conjunctival injection and tearing.

    A 71-year-old woman presented with a short history of episodes of severe left-sided orbital and temporal pain in paroxysms lasting 60 to 90 seconds, and accompanied by ipsilateral lacrimation of the eye, rhinorrhea, and conjunctival injection. Results of clinical examination and structural imaging were normal and a clinical diagnosis of SUNCT (short-lasting unilateral neuralgiform pains with conjunctival injection and tearing) was made. The patient had a BOLD contrast-magnetic resonance imaging study in which significant activation was seen in the region of the ipsilateral hypothalamic gray, comparing the pain to pain-free state. The region of activation was the same in this patient as has been reported in acute attacks of cluster headache.
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ranking = 1.3611933436883
keywords = headache
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3/65. Gas-permeable scleral contact lens therapy in ocular surface disease.

    PURPOSE: To describe the therapeutic benefits of nonfenestrated gas-permeable scleral contact lenses in the management of patients with ocular surface disease.methods: The charts of 49 consecutive patients (76 eyes) with ocular surface disease whose management included the use of gas-permeable scleral contact lenses were reviewed. We also developed a questionnaire to assess the impact of lens wear on subjective aspects of activities of daily living. RESULTS: The mean age of the 49 patients was 44.6 years (range, 3 to 87 years); 31 patients were female and 18 were male. The most common indication for fitting of the lenses was stevens-johnson syndrome (54 [71%] of the 76 eyes). Other indications included ocular cicatricial pemphigoid, exposure keratitis, toxic epidermal necrolysis, postherpetic keratitis, congenital deficiency of meibomian glands, superior limbal keratoconjunctivitis, Sjogren syndrome, and inflammatory corneal degeneration. The mean follow-up was 33.6 months (range, 2 to 144 months). Improvement in best-corrected visual acuity (defined as a gain of 2 or more Snellen lines) was observed in 40 (53%) of the eyes. In eight (53%) of the 15 eyes with active corneal epithelial defects at the time of lens fitting, the defects healed, whereas in the remaining seven eyes the corneal epithelial defects remained unchanged. Forty-five (92%) of the 49 patients reported improvement in their quality of life as a result of reduction of photophobia and discomfort. The mean wearing time of the gas-permeable scleral contact lenses was 13.7 hours per day (range, 4 to 18 hours). Many patients had preparatory surgical procedures before lens fitting (for example, punctal occlusion or mucous membrane grafting), and some had visual rehabilitation surgical procedures (for example, keratoplasty and/or cataract surgery) after lens fitting.CONCLUSIONS: Gas-permeable scleral contact lens wear provides an additional effective strategy in the surface management and visual rehabilitation of patients with severe ocular surface disease.
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ranking = 1
keywords = discomfort
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4/65. blepharoptosis surgery complicated by late suture migration.

    PURPOSE: To report late suture migration as a complication of blepharoptosis surgery. METHOD: case reports. RESULTS: After upper eyelid blepharoptosis repair, two eyes of two patients developed unusual foreign body reactions and ulceration in the conjunctiva caused by migration of nonabsorbable suture from the levator aponeurosis to the upper conjunctival fornix. The foreign body caused eyelid edema, papillary changes in the upper tarsal conjunctiva, recurrent blepharoptosis, and a foreign body sensation that started more than 3 months after the surgery and persisted until the suture was removed. The sutures, hidden in edematous conjunctiva of the superior fornix, eluded detection. CONCLUSIONS: Foreign body reaction secondary to suture migration is an uncommon complication of blepharoptosis repair.
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ranking = 0.12163471935392
keywords = upper
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5/65. Traumatic asphyxia complicated by unwitnessed cardiac arrest.

    We report a case of traumatic asphyxia complicated by unwitnessed cardiac arrest in which the patient has made a good, functional recovery. Traumatic asphyxia is an uncommon clinical syndrome usually occurring after chest compression. Associated physical findings include subconjunctival hemorrhage and purple-blue neck and face discoloration. These facial changes can mimic those seen with massive closed head injury; however, cerebral injury after traumatic asphyxia usually occurs due to cerebral hypoxia. When such features are observed, the diagnosis of traumatic asphyxia should be considered. Prompt treatment with attention to the reestablishment of oxygenation and perfusion may result in good outcomes.
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ranking = 0.0012103432143829
keywords = chest
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6/65. sunct syndrome responsive to gabapentin (Neurontin).

    A 48-year-old male suffering with SUNCT (severe unilateral neuralgiform headache with conjunctival injection and tearing, rhinorrhea and sub-clinical sweating) presented in 1996 after a 10-year history of multiple failed therapies. The symptoms included strictly left-sided ocular, as well as facial and temple pain. The pain attacks were burning, sharp, shooting and occurred 25 times daily, lasting 2 to 3 minutes with tearing and conjunctival injection. There was no associated nausea or vomiting, but there was photophobia. No other autonomic changes were reported and the pain was not triggerable. Initially Indocin (indomethacin) was tried without significant benefit. Gabapentin (Neurontin) was then started with improvement at 1800 mg per day. The patient was then lost to follow-up for 3 years, as he moved from the los angeles area. He returned in 1999 having stopped the gabapentin after his prescription ran out in 1996, reporting the pain returned immediately. Again gabapentin was prescribed and at 900 mg three times daily he has been pain free for 12 months.
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ranking = 0.27223866873767
keywords = headache
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7/65. Two new SUNCT cases responsive to lamotrigine.

    Short-lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing (SUNCT) is a rare and debilitating headache form generally unresponsive to treatment. Following a recent report of a SUNCT patient who responded to lamotrigine, we tried this drug in two new SUNCT patients, reported here. In both cases prophylaxis was successful, suggesting lamotrigine might be the first effective treatment for this rare and debilitating headache syndrome.
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ranking = 0.816716006213
keywords = headache
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8/65. Partial unilateral lentiginosis with ocular involvement.

    Partial unilateral lentiginosis (PUL) is an unusual pigmentary disorder characterized by numerous lentigines grouped within an area of normal skin; the pigmented macules are often in a segmental distribution with a sharp demarcation at the midline. We report the first case of ocular involvement in a patient with this diagnosis. The patient, a 30-year-old Peruvian woman, had multiple brown macules on the left upper face in primarily a V1 and V2 distribution with a sharp demarcation at the midline of the forehead. The lesions first appeared near the hairline when she was 5 years of age, and then began to extend onto the face. She also had a discrete area of brown pigmentation on the left lateral bulbar conjunctiva. Because the patient had been previously diagnosed by several dermatologists as having either a speckled lentiginous nevus or a nevus of ota, we draw attention to the entity PUL and the possibility of ocular involvement.
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ranking = 0.040544906451306
keywords = upper
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9/65. A rare case of both eyelids swelling: isolated conjunctival amyloidosis.

    Amyloid is an eosinophilic, amorphous protein that has been reported to deposit in virtually any tissue or organ and when extensive, may attain tumourous proportions. We present a rare case where both the upper and lower palpebral conjunctiva were affected by amyloid deposition.
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ranking = 0.040544906451306
keywords = upper
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10/65. A rare cause of unilateral upper and lower eyelid swelling: isolated conjunctival amyloidosis.

    amyloidosis is a term encompassing a group of disorders characterized by the extracellular deposition of a substance called amyloid in various tissues. A very rare cause of chronic ocular discomfort is amyloidosis. We treated a patient with the above complaint in whom both eyelids were diffusely swollen with no other chronic ophthalmic complaints. Transconjunctival biopsy revealed amyloidosis and was confirmed on congo-red staining. Since we are aware that surgical excision may cause eyelid cicatrisation or secondary xerophthalmia, we explained the pros and cons of surgery to the patient. In view of the 12-year history and lack of other symptoms, the patient preferred to be kept under observation. Follow-up at two years did not reveal any significant increase in the size of the swelling. Therefore, we recommend that in a patient with amyloidosis with no visual/ocular impairment, the condition should be left alone without surgical intervention.
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ranking = 1.1621796258052
keywords = discomfort, upper
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