Oculogyric crises entities
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Clinic
- OGC is the name of a dystonic reaction to certain drugs or medical conditions characterized by a prolonged involuntary upward deviation of the eyes.
- It refers to the bilateral elevation of the visual gaze, but several other responses are associated with the crisis.
- Epilepsy can manifest as oculogyric seizures, also called versive seizures.
Signs and symptoms
- Initial symptoms include restlessness, agitation, malaise, or a fixed stare.
- Extreme and sustained upward deviation of the eyes. In addition, the eyes may converge, deviate upward and laterally, or deviate downward.
- The most frequently reported associated findings are backwards and lateral flexion of the neck, widely opened mouth, tongue protrusion, and ocular pain.
- However, the condition may also be associated with intensely painful jaw spasms which may result in the breaking of a tooth.
- A wave of exhaustion may follow an episode. The abrupt termination of the psychiatric symptoms at the conclusion of the crisis is most striking.
- Other features
- Mutism,
- Palilalia,
- Eye blinking,
- Lacrimation,
- Pupil dilation,
- Drooling,
- Respiratory dyskinesia,
- Increased blood pressure and heart rate,
- Facial flushing, headache, vertigo, anxiety, agitation,
- Compulsive thinking,
- Paranoia,
- Depression,
- Recurrent fixed ideas,
- Depersonalization,
- Violence
- Obscene language.
Causes
Drugs that can trigger an oculogyric crisis include
- Drugs such as haloperidol, chlorpromazine, fluphenazine, olanzapine, carbamazepine, chloroquine, cisplatin, diazoxide, levodopa, lithium, metoclopramide, lurasidone, domperidone, nifedipine, pemoline, phencyclidine ("PCP"), reserpine, and cetirizine, an antihistamine
- Other causes can include aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase deficiency,
- Postencephalitic Parkinson's
- Tourette's syndrome
- MS
- Neurosyphilis,
- Head trauma, bilateral thalamic infarction, lesions of the fourth ventricle, cystic glioma of the third ventricle,
- Herpes encephalitis
- Kernicterus
- Juvenile Parkinson's disease.
- Patients with procyclidine addiction or craving may simulate signs of EPS to receive procyclidine.