Ophthalmoplegia and Ondine's curse
E. C. Dooling and E. P. Richardson Jr
Ocular abnormalities and psychomotor difficulties were prominent in two
unrelated children; in addition, the older child had respiratory
irregularity during sleep. The pathologic findings included lesions of the
optic nerve in the case with available material and established the
diagnosis of Leigh's subacute necrotizing encephalopathy. This disorder is
thought to result from inhibition of a thiamine-dependent enzymatic process
and may be modified by greatly increased thiamine intake. Suspicion of the
diagnosis in a child with ophthalmoplegia or other ocular abnormalities may
lead to earlier recognition and more successful treatment of the disease.