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Unusual association of Eales disease with multifocal neurological deficit.

Abstract
A man who had suffered from Eales disease at the age of 20 presented an acute Brown-Séquard spinal syndrome when he was 30, followed shortly after by paralysis of the right abducens and recurrent laryngeal nerves. Steroid treatment apparently relieved the myelopathy while the neurological deficits have remained unchanged for the past 14 years. In view of the clinical and CSF findings the neurological deficits are attributed to the same disease process as that underlying the peripheral retinal abnormalities characteristic of Eales disease rather than to multiple sclerosis.
AuthorsG Alfieri, F Barontini, S Brogelli, S Maurri
JournalItalian journal of neurological sciences (Ital J Neurol Sci) Vol. 5 Issue 4 Pg. 461-2 (Dec 1984) ISSN: 0392-0461 [Print] Italy
PMID6530368 (Publication Type: Case Reports, Journal Article)
Topics
  • Abducens Nerve
  • Adult
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Nervous System Diseases (diagnosis)
  • Paralysis (diagnosis)
  • Retinal Diseases (diagnosis)
  • Retinal Hemorrhage (diagnosis)
  • Retinal Vessels
  • Sensation
  • Spinal Cord Diseases (diagnosis)
  • Syndrome
  • Vocal Cord Paralysis (diagnosis)

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