Interactive Transcript
0:00
I want to make three points about third nerve syndromes.
0:05
First, every medical student and resident, fellow,
0:09
and attending should know that PCOM aneurysms
0:12
can generate a third nerve palsy.
0:13
And that's the classic aneurysm to do so.
0:16
Second, intranuclear ophthalmoplegia.
0:19
Let's redraw the third nerve nucleus,
0:23
which sits right in front of the aqueduct of Sylvius.
0:27
There's also an accessory third nerve
0:29
nucleus that's a little medial.
0:30
And then the nerve kind of bows outward a little bit
0:33
and exits the interpeduncular cistern, medial to the
0:37
substantia nigra, which is right over here.
0:39
And you can actually see a little bit of the third
0:41
nerve, these little gray dots right there.
0:43
Now, in intranuclear ophthalmoplegia,
0:47
you'll have involvement of the nucleus itself and the
0:52
medial longitudinal fasciculus, perhaps as an MS plaque.
0:55
So an MS plaque might be located right over here.
0:59
It might clip one or both of the nuclei, and you would
1:02
get an INO, an intranuclear ophthalmoplegia.
1:04
What's that look like?
1:06
We're going to make a couple of eyes.
1:08
Here's an eyeball.
1:10
Here's another eyeball.
1:12
And then we're going to have the patient look to their left.
1:16
And when they look to their left,
1:17
the lateral rectus pulls this eyeball over.
1:20
But because there's a third nerve palsy,
1:22
and I actually should make the palsy over here.
1:24
So let's make the lesion right there, not on this side.
1:28
I'm going to erase it
1:29
so it's going to be on the right side.
1:31
And this eyeball is lagging because the
1:34
third nerve is weak.
1:35
Therefore, the medial rectus can't pull the eyeball over,
1:38
but the lateral rectus does because it's functioning.
1:40
And so, this eye has an adduction problem.
1:44
And we say this patient has a right INO.
1:48
The third point I want to make is related to Weber's Syndrome.
1:52
So let me draw again the third nerve.
1:55
Here's the third nerve nucleus.
1:58
Here's the third nerve,
1:59
bows out a little bit, then comes in.
2:01
And in Weber's Syndrome,
2:04
let's go to my favorite color, yellow.
2:07
We're going to have an area along the medial peduncle
2:12
that clips the third nerve as it courses
2:17
towards its apparent exit.
2:19
So right there, it's going to get clipped and the patient
2:22
is going to have an ipsilateral third nerve palsy with a fixed pupil.
2:27
What else are they going to have?
2:28
Well, let's look over here.
2:30
Let's draw it again.
2:35
And we relatively spare the red nucleus in Weber's Syndrome,
2:40
but we do involve the exiting,
2:42
as you can see over here,
2:43
the exiting third nerve.
2:45
So ipsilateral third nerve palsy.
2:47
You may also have a supranuclear
2:49
7th nerve ipsilateral palsy.
2:52
But because the corticospinal tract is going
2:54
to decussate as internal arcuate fibers,
2:57
it's going to be a spastic hemiparesis.
3:00
That's contralateral.
3:01
So contralateral motor plus ipsilateral seventh,
3:06
plus ipsilateral third is going to
3:08
give you a Weber's syndrome.
3:11
And every medical student absolutely has to learn this.
3:14
What produces it?
3:16
Occlusion of the posterior cerebral artery,
3:18
the PCOM or posterior choroidal branches.
3:21
There's a variation of this called Benedikt's syndrome,
3:24
where it comes back a little further
3:26
and it may get the red nucleus.
3:28
It may also get the cross-descending
3:30
superior cerebellar peduncle.
3:31
But the bottom line, more advanced,
3:33
not so basic-basic,
3:35
is that you have an ipsilateral oculomotor
3:38
nerve with a contralateral cerebellar syndrome.
3:41
That's known as Benedikt's syndrome.
3:44
As we finish out,
3:45
let's give some creds to the Weber family.
3:47
The father, Hermann David Weber,
3:49
described this Weber's Vascular Syndrome.
3:52
The son, Frederick Parkes Weber,
3:55
described Klippel-Trénaunay Weber, Parkes Weber syndrome,
3:59
Osler-Weber-Rendu.
4:00
A prolific family.
4:01
That's all from me.
4:03
Pormeranz out.
© 2024 Medality. All Rights Reserved.