Background: An adolescent girl had isolated abnormal downward gaze and oculovestibular (cold caloric) testing during propofol administration, prompting concern for brainstem abnormality.
Patient: An otherwise healthy 16-year-old girl presented after an intentional hanging. Brainstem reflexes were normal except that both eyes exhibited tonic downward gaze on initial examination. After propofol was suspended for 30 minutes in order to evaluate her level of responsiveness, her eyes normalized to midposition from tonic downward gaze. With reinitiation of propofol, the eyes returned to the former downward position. C-collar stabilization prohibited the usual oculocephalic (doll's eyes) evaluation. Right-sided cold water instillation resulted in right eye exodeviation to the right with minimal medial movement of the left eye to the right. After left-sided cold water instillation, the left eye deviated downward with minimal medial deviation of the right eye. She was extubated and off sedatives within 48 hours of admission, and normal ocular motility returned.
Conclusion: This patient exhibited abnormal ocular motility and cold caloric response with single-agent propofol exposure. The remainder of her cranial nerve examination was normal, and her normal imaging studies and prompt resolution led us to suspect a propofol effect. Physicians should be aware of the pharmacologic alterations of ocular motility and cold caloric testing when propofol is administered.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2014.03.028 | DOI Listing |
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