'The immobility of this man's face is very striking; it is as smooth and expressionklss as if carved out of wood. The passions and emotions of eighteen years have left no trace upon it, and time has changed only its size.' Thus Harlan (1881) described the appearance of a patient with bilateral congenital facial and external rectus paralysis. Chisholm's account (1882) was equally clear. The collation of cases of congenital facial palsy combined with other cranial muscle weakness by Mobius (1892) led to more general recognition of nuclear degeneration (as he termed it), or agenesis, and to eponymous fame. More recently Henderson (1939) and Danis (1945) have fully reviewed the condition. Paralysis may be total or partial, u...
Abstract The Moebius syndrome is an infrequent symptomology in which the sixth and seventh cranial ...
Paralysis of the face results from any interruption to the nervous pathway from the cerebral cortex ...
We report a 4 month old female infant, 3rd in order of birth of the first cousin consanguineous pare...
Various terms have been applied to this condition: Mobius's syndrome, congenital facial diplegi...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVE: To investigate the variable clinical picture of Mobius synd...
Item does not contain fulltextWe studied the nature and extent of facial muscle innervation and the ...
Contains fulltext : 26983_mobisy.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The overa...
Contains fulltext : 48559.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: To ...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVE: To detail the radiologic findings in Mobius syndrome, in or...
Objective: To investigate the neurophysiologic aspects of facial motor control in patients with spor...
This congenital syndrome was described at about the same time by Harlan, Chisholm, and Mobius
An exhaustive review of the literature on the subject of congenital facial diplegia has been undert...
Background: Moebius syndrome, a rare congenital disorder of varying severity, involves multiple cran...
Moebius syndrome is a congenital facial palsy associated with the impairment of ocular abduction. Th...
In 1880 Von Graefe and Saemish grouped some patients with infrequent non progressive congenital di...
Abstract The Moebius syndrome is an infrequent symptomology in which the sixth and seventh cranial ...
Paralysis of the face results from any interruption to the nervous pathway from the cerebral cortex ...
We report a 4 month old female infant, 3rd in order of birth of the first cousin consanguineous pare...
Various terms have been applied to this condition: Mobius's syndrome, congenital facial diplegi...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVE: To investigate the variable clinical picture of Mobius synd...
Item does not contain fulltextWe studied the nature and extent of facial muscle innervation and the ...
Contains fulltext : 26983_mobisy.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The overa...
Contains fulltext : 48559.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)OBJECTIVE: To ...
Item does not contain fulltextOBJECTIVE: To detail the radiologic findings in Mobius syndrome, in or...
Objective: To investigate the neurophysiologic aspects of facial motor control in patients with spor...
This congenital syndrome was described at about the same time by Harlan, Chisholm, and Mobius
An exhaustive review of the literature on the subject of congenital facial diplegia has been undert...
Background: Moebius syndrome, a rare congenital disorder of varying severity, involves multiple cran...
Moebius syndrome is a congenital facial palsy associated with the impairment of ocular abduction. Th...
In 1880 Von Graefe and Saemish grouped some patients with infrequent non progressive congenital di...
Abstract The Moebius syndrome is an infrequent symptomology in which the sixth and seventh cranial ...
Paralysis of the face results from any interruption to the nervous pathway from the cerebral cortex ...
We report a 4 month old female infant, 3rd in order of birth of the first cousin consanguineous pare...