نتایج جستجو برای: ramsay hunt syndrome

تعداد نتایج: 627742  

Journal: :Forum Médical Suisse ‒ Swiss Medical Forum 2009

Journal: :Otology & neurotology : official publication of the American Otological Society, American Neurotology Society [and] European Academy of Otology and Neurotology 2009
Rodrigo de Mendonca Vaz Fred H Linthicum

In 1907, James Ramsay Hunt (1) described a syndrome characterized by facial nerve paralysis associated with herpetic eruption of the pinna and suggested that herpes zoster oticus resulted from a geniculate ganglionitis. However, many contemporary authors agree that this condition represents a polycranial neuronitis and not simply a geniculate ganglionitis. Thus, it is a more complex disease, an...

Journal: :AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology 1999
S Sartoretti-Schefer S Kollias A Valavanis

Postcontrast T1-weighted MR images in a patient with Ramsay Hunt syndrome showed an enhancing lesion in the region of the nucleus of the pontine facial nerve and abnormal enhancement of the intrameatal, labyrinthine, and tympanic facial nerve segments and of the geniculate ganglion, as well as enhancement of the vestibulocochlear nerve and parts of the membranous labyrinth. This enhancement mos...

2015
Yoo Min Park Da Rae Kim Ji Yoon Park Seul Ki Kim Se Yun Kim Jin Sug Kim Yu Ho Lee Yang-Gyun Kim Kyung-Hwan Jeong Ju-Young Moon Sang-Ho Lee Chun-Gyoo Ihm Tae-Won Lee

We report the first case of Ramsay Hunt syndrome (RHS) diagnosed after kidney transplantation in Korea. RHS is a disease caused by latent varicella-zoster characterized to involve geniculate ganglion of the seventh cranial nerve. Patients who have undergone kidney transplantation can be easily affected by viral infections because of their immune-compromised status. A 35-year-old man with hypert...

2015
İmran Aydoğdu Enes Ataç Ziya Saltürk Yavuz Atar Erdi Özdemir Yavuz Uyar Ahmet Arslanoğlu Güler Berkiten

Ramsay Hunt syndrome (RHS) is a disorder characterized by herpetic eruptions on the auricle, facial paralysis, and vestibulocochlear dysfunction and is attributed to varicella zoster virus (VZV) infection in the geniculate ganglion. Although it is a common cause of acute peripheral facial paralysis, children are not usually affected. The diagnosis is based on history and physical findings. Trea...

Journal: :Forum Médical Suisse ‒ Swiss Medical Forum 2004

Journal: :Indian Journal of Otolaryngology and Head & Neck Surgery 2019

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