Signs of essential blepharospasm: a motion-picture analysis
W. H. Coles
Motion pictures of 15 patients with essential blepharospasm were studied.
Previously unrecognized signs indicated multiple cranial nerve involvement.
These signs include impersistence of gaze, lid retraction, tongue thrust,
head tilts, head jerks, vertical gaze spasms, and asymmetry. The sugns were
also observed in a patient with bilateral blepharospasm who had a history
of Bell's palsy suggesting facial nerve injury as a possible factor in
blepharospasm. The presence of these signs can be explained by known neural
pathways, but the site, or sites, of the lesion remains obscure. These
signs may be important in assessing severity and in treatment evaluation.