Journal of neuro-ophthalmology : the official journal of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society
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A 54-year-old woman who underwent chest tube placement after a lung biopsy was found on the first postoperative day to have ipsilateral ptosis and miosis, suggesting a Horner syndrome. A chest CT scan showed that the tip of the chest tube was apposed to the stellate ganglion. ⋯ We propose that the Horner syndrome arose as a result of pressure on the stellate ganglion, which interrupted neural conduction but did not sever the sympathetic pathway ("neurapraxia"). Whether prompt repositioning of the chest tube was critical in reversing the Horner syndrome is uncertain.
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Harlequin syndrome is a curious phenomenon in which one half of the face fails to flush during thermal or emotional stress as a result of damage to vasodilator sympathetic fibers. Anecdotal reports suggest that some of these patients have abnormal pupils. In this study we set out to systematically investigate autonomic pupil disturbances in an unselected cohort of patients with harlequin syndrome. ⋯ The frequent coexistence of harlequin and Horner syndromes without other neurologic deficits suggests pathologic changes affecting the superior cervical ganglion. Because either syndrome may occur alone, damage is apparently selective. Among the patients with harlequin syndrome who also have tonic pupils and tendon areflexia (Holmes-Adie syndrome), we postulate a ganglionopathy affecting not merely the (sympathetic) superior cervical ganglion, but also the (parasympathetic) ciliary and dorsal root ganglia. Because we found that more than 10% of patients had an undisclosed mass lesion in the chest or neck or a generalized autonomic neuropathy, we recommend a targeted evaluation in selected patients with harlequin syndrome.