1. Acute comitant strabismus in anti-GQ1b antibody syndrome.
- Author
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Lee, Sun-Uk, Baek, Seol-Hee, Kim, Hyo-Jung, Choi, Jeong-Yoon, Kim, Byung-Jo, and Kim, Ji-Soo
- Subjects
VESTIBULO-ocular reflex ,SYNDROMES ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,PEOPLE with paralysis ,EYE paralysis ,BENIGN paroxysmal positional vertigo ,STRABISMUS - Abstract
Ophthalmoplegia is the diagnostic hallmark of anti-GQ1b antibody syndrome. This study aimed to define the patterns of acute comitant strabismus in patients with anti-GQ1b antibody syndromes. We retrospectively analyzed the ocular motor findings in 84 patients with anti-GQ1b antibody-associated ophthalmoplegia during the acute phases. Of the 84 patients, 11 (13%) showed acute comitant strabismus. Compared to those without, patients with acute comitant strabismus frequently showed abnormal ocular motor findings that included gaze-evoked (n = 8), spontaneous (n = 4) and positional nystagmus (n = 4), saccadic hypermetria (n = 3), head-shaking nystagmus (n = 2), pulse-step mismatch (n = 1), and impaired visual cancellation of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (n = 1, p < 0.001). On the contrary, iridoplegia (p = 0.029) and ptosis (p = 0.001) were more commonly observed in patients with paralytic (incomitant) strabismus than in those with acute comitant strabismus. Comitant strabismus can manifest during the acute phase of anti-GQ1b antibody syndromes in association with other central ocular motor abnormalities. These findings implicate that the cerebellum and/or brainstem can be the primary target of the anti-GQ1b antibodies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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