Abstract
During a 10 year period 24 patients with definite multiple sclerosis with isolated cranial nerve palsies were studied (third and fourth nerve: one patient each, sixth nerve: 12 patients, seventh nerve: three patients, eighth nerve: seven patients), in whom cranial nerve palsies were the presenting sign in 14 and the only clinical sign of an exacerbation in 10 patients. MRI was carried out in 20 patients and substantiated corresponding brainstem lesions in seven patients (third nerve: one patient, sixth nerve: four patients, eighth nerve: two patients). Additional abnormal findings of electro-oculography, or masseter reflex, or blink reflex, or combinations of these were found in 20 patients and interpreted in favour of a brainstem lesion at the level of the respective cranial nerve. In 11 of 14 patients with isolated cranial nerve palsies as the presenting sign of multiple sclerosis, dissemination in space was documented by MRI, and in the remaining three by evoked potentials. In patients with multiple sclerosis with isolated cranial nerve palsies, MRI is the most sensitive method of documenting dissemination in space and electrophysiological testing the most sensitive at disclosing brainstem lesions.
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