All Access Pass - 1 FREE Month!
Institutional email required, no credit card necessary.
3rd Nerve Palsy
Remember: "DOWN and OUT" with a dilated pupil.
Permission from Dr. Schwartzman adapt/reuse photograph within this image.
Free One-Month Access!
Institutional (.edu or .org) Email Required
or Start your One-Week Free Trial!
Already Have an Account?
Log In
Log in through OpenAthens

3rd Nerve Palsy

Oculomotor Palsy
Remember: "DOWN and OUT" with a dilated pupil.
OVERVIEW OF CAUSES: MEDICAL vs SURGICAL CAUSES CN 3 lesions are generally divided into medical or surgical (compressive) causes: classically, medical third nerve lesions spare the pupil.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
MEDICAL CAUSES
Isolated third nerve lesions may occur with:
  • Branch occlusion of the posterior cerebral artery. Most often these occur with contralateral weakness (fascicular third nerve) or with ataxia (Claude’s syndrome) or choreoathetosis (Benedict’s syndrome) from thalamoperforate branch occlusion of the P1 segment of the posterior cerebral artery.
  • Rarely, an ascending interpeduncular branch occlusion from the top of the basilar artery.
  • Myasthenia gravis frequently affects the third nerve with pupillary sparing and increased ptosis with fatigue.
  • Rarely, demyelinating disease affects the third nerve.
Symmetrical ptosis and oculomotor weakness is characteristic of:
  • Mitochondrial disease (Kearns–Sayre syndrome, progressive external ophthalmoplegia)
  • Congenital myopathy (centronuclear or myotubular myopathy)
  • Oculopharyngeal dystrophy.
Surgical (compressive) third nerve is seen with: