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The best method to develop a list of the causes of a constricted pupil is to use neuroanatomy. one simply follows the nerve pathways from the end organ (iris) through the peripheral portion of the nerves to the central nervous system (brainstem) (Table 18).

CONSTRICTED PUPILS (MIOSIS)

CONSTRICTED PUPILS (MIOSIS)
TABLE 18. CONSTRICTED PUPILS (MIOSIS)
V |
I |
N |
D |
I |
C |
A |
T |
E |
||
Vascular |
Inflammatory |
Neoplasm |
Degenerative |
Intoxication |
Congenital |
Allergic and Autoimmune |
Trauma |
Endocrine |
||
End Organ |
Iritis |
Hyperopia |
Cholinergic drug |
Hyperopia |
Amyloidosis |
Hypoparathyroidism |
||||
Keratitis |
Presbyopia |
Congenital myosis |
||||||||
Arachnodactyly |
||||||||||
Peripheral Sympathetic Pathways |
Carotid aneurysm and thrombosis |
Cervical adenitis |
Hodgkin disease |
Cervical rib |
Brachial plexus trauma |
|||||
Migraine |
Mediastinitis |
Mediastinal tumor |
Klumpke paralysis |
|||||||
Aortic aneurysm |
Pancoast tumor |
|||||||||
Brainstem |
Posterior inferior cerebellar artery occlusion |
Encephalitis |
Brainstem tumor |
Toxic encephalopathy (e.g., morphine) |
||||||
Pontine hemorrhage |
Neurosyphilis (Argyll Robertson pupil) |
|||||||||
Spinal Cord |
Poliomyelitis |
Spinal cord tumor |
Syringomyelia |
Multiple sclerosis |
Fracture |
|||||
Tuberculosis |
Metastatic tumor to the spine |
Herniated disc |
||||||||
Epidural abscess |
||||||||||
Transverse myelitis |
In unilateral miosis, the clinician must look for local conditions such as iritis and keratitis. If there is an associated ptosis and enophthalmos, Horner syndrome is present. The lesion is undoubtedly located somewhere along the sympathetic pathway. Miosis alone, however, may be due to a sympathetic lesion. Bilateral miosis and coma should suggest narcotic intoxication or a brain stem lesion (possibly a pontine hemorrhage). Bilateral miosis in an alert individual with pupils that fail to react to light but react to accommodation is clear evidence of an Argyll Robertson pupil. Partial Argyll Robertson pupils do occur. Bilateral miosis in older individuals without loss of the light reflexes suggests hyperopia or arteriosclerosis.
The laboratory workup may include an x-ray film of the cervical spine, chest and skull roentgenogram, a CT scan or MRI of the brain, and a spinal tap or arteriograms, depending on the association of other symptoms and signs. A starch test to determine if sweating function is lost on the side of the lesion will help locate the level of the sympathetic nerve lesion.
Read excerpts from these other book chapters related to Pupil constriction:
Copyright Details: Differential Diagnosis in Primary Care, Copyright © 2008 Williams & Wilkins.
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More About This Book:
Title: Differential Diagnosis in Primary Care Authors: R. Douglas Collins Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Copyright: 2007 ISBN: 0-7817-6812-8
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