The discussant went over an approach to diplopia:
- Neurological -- i.e. ischemia/vasculitis, demyelination, tumour (including leptomenegeal), infection (TB, syphilis, listeria, lyme), toxic/metabolic (alcohol/wernike's)
- NMJ - mysesthenia and other myesthenic syndromes
- Muscular/Structural - Graves, masses in the muscles, muscular impingement
- Opthomologic -- monocular diplopia -- think corneal or lens problem
Cranial Nerve III:
- Pupil spared/Involved
- Adducts the eye/Innervates Medial Rectus
- Typically "down and out" gaze on affected side with inability to adduct
- Inability to look down and in leading to diplopia while walking down stairs or reading newspaper
- Head characteristically tilted away from the lesion
- Inability to abduct the eye
- Eye deviated inwards
- Typically normal gaze when looking straight ahead
- Inability to abduct the eye on the contralateral side of the lesion due to failure of co-ordination of gaze.
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