Preferred Name | Parinaud syndrome | |
Synonyms |
paralysis of vertical movement dorsal midbrain syndrome Parinaud's ophthalmoplegia vertical gaze palsy - Parinaud Parinaud's syndrome Parinaud syndrome syndrome, Parinaud's syndrome, Parinaud Parinauds syndrome |
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Definitions |
A rare syndrome affecting conjugate vertical eye movement. It is often caused by a dorsal midbrain neoplasm, commonly a pinealoma, but may also be attributable to demyelinating diseases or stroke. Clinical signs include limitation of upward gaze, light-near dissociation of the pupillary response, eyelid retraction (Collier's sign) and convergence-retraction nystagmus. Clinical course is dependent on effective treatment of underlying cause. |
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ID |
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/MONDO_0022220 |
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altLabel |
paralysis of vertical movement dorsal midbrain syndrome Parinaud's ophthalmoplegia vertical gaze palsy - Parinaud Parinaud's syndrome Parinaud syndrome syndrome, Parinaud's syndrome, Parinaud Parinauds syndrome |
|
definition |
A rare syndrome affecting conjugate vertical eye movement. It is often caused by a dorsal midbrain neoplasm, commonly a pinealoma, but may also be attributable to demyelinating diseases or stroke. Clinical signs include limitation of upward gaze, light-near dissociation of the pupillary response, eyelid retraction (Collier's sign) and convergence-retraction nystagmus. Clinical course is dependent on effective treatment of underlying cause. |
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has_exact_synonym |
Parinaud's syndrome Parinaud syndrome syndrome, Parinaud's syndrome, Parinaud Parinauds syndrome |
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has_related_synonym |
paralysis of vertical movement dorsal midbrain syndrome Parinaud's ophthalmoplegia vertical gaze palsy - Parinaud |
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label |
Parinaud syndrome |
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prefixIRI |
MONDO:0022220 |
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prefLabel |
Parinaud syndrome |
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textual definition |
A rare syndrome affecting conjugate vertical eye movement. It is often caused by a dorsal midbrain neoplasm, commonly a pinealoma, but may also be attributable to demyelinating diseases or stroke. Clinical signs include limitation of upward gaze, light-near dissociation of the pupillary response, eyelid retraction (Collier's sign) and convergence-retraction nystagmus. Clinical course is dependent on effective treatment of underlying cause. |
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subClassOf |