Superior oblique muscle dysfunction following anterior ethmoidal artery ligation for epistaxis
J. M. Couch, M. E. Somers and C. Gonzalez
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Conn.
Superior oblique muscle palsy is a frequently encountered acquired muscle
deficit accounting for vertical and torsional diplopia. There were two
cases of residual isolated superior oblique palsy following anterior
ethmoidal artery ligation for epistaxis, a finding not previously reported.
The mechanism is suggested to be due either to direct trochlear damage by
separation from the periosteum or to localized hematoma formation beneath
the periosteum with resultant fibrosis and displacement of the trochlea
from its normal apposition to the frontal bone.