Tonic pupils develop as a remote effect of cancer in the following three settings: (a) in patients with autonomic neuropathy, with or without other clinical or electrophysiologic evidence of sensory neuropathy; (b) in patients with the Eaton-Lambert syndrome as a component of the dysautonomia that frequently accompanies that disorder; and (c) in one reported case of a child with neuroblastoma and paraneoplastic opsoclonus-ocular flutter and myoclonus
Dysautonomi is a term used to describe any congenital or acquired anomaly in the autonomic nervous s...
Twenty cases with isolated (local) tonic pupil due to involvement of the postganglionic parasympathe...
Adie syndrome is an uncommon, idiopathic condition that may develop in otherwise healthy persons and...
Tonic pupils develop as a remote effect of cancer in the following three settings: (a) in patients w...
This type of tonic pupil, usually with bilateral involvement, represents one manifestation of a wide...
The syndrome of opsoclonus (and ocular flutter), myoclonus, and ataxia is emphasized here because it...
Three main paraneoplastic conditions can produce visual symptoms and signs from specific damage to o...
A pure sensory neuronopathy can occur as a neurologically isolated remote effect of cancer, but it m...
This myasthenic syndrome, also called the Eaton-Lambert syndrome, is more common in men than in wome...
A number of disorders characterized by visual dysfunction, neurologic dysfunction, or both occur in ...
This paraneoplastic peripheral neuropathy is actually a heterogeneous group of conditions whose comm...
Historically, the term carcinomatous neuromyopathy was once used to describe all remote effects of c...
The value of observation of pupillary size and motility in the evaluation of patients with neurologi...
The most common cause of peripheral neuropathy in a patient with cancer is compression of a nerve tr...
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disorder characterized by pathogenic antibodies against acet...
Dysautonomi is a term used to describe any congenital or acquired anomaly in the autonomic nervous s...
Twenty cases with isolated (local) tonic pupil due to involvement of the postganglionic parasympathe...
Adie syndrome is an uncommon, idiopathic condition that may develop in otherwise healthy persons and...
Tonic pupils develop as a remote effect of cancer in the following three settings: (a) in patients w...
This type of tonic pupil, usually with bilateral involvement, represents one manifestation of a wide...
The syndrome of opsoclonus (and ocular flutter), myoclonus, and ataxia is emphasized here because it...
Three main paraneoplastic conditions can produce visual symptoms and signs from specific damage to o...
A pure sensory neuronopathy can occur as a neurologically isolated remote effect of cancer, but it m...
This myasthenic syndrome, also called the Eaton-Lambert syndrome, is more common in men than in wome...
A number of disorders characterized by visual dysfunction, neurologic dysfunction, or both occur in ...
This paraneoplastic peripheral neuropathy is actually a heterogeneous group of conditions whose comm...
Historically, the term carcinomatous neuromyopathy was once used to describe all remote effects of c...
The value of observation of pupillary size and motility in the evaluation of patients with neurologi...
The most common cause of peripheral neuropathy in a patient with cancer is compression of a nerve tr...
Myasthenia gravis (MG) is an autoimmune disorder characterized by pathogenic antibodies against acet...
Dysautonomi is a term used to describe any congenital or acquired anomaly in the autonomic nervous s...
Twenty cases with isolated (local) tonic pupil due to involvement of the postganglionic parasympathe...
Adie syndrome is an uncommon, idiopathic condition that may develop in otherwise healthy persons and...