About holmes-adie syndrome
What is holmes-adie syndrome?
Adie Syndrome is a rare neurological disorder affecting the pupil of the eye. In most patients the pupil is dilated (larger than normal) and slow to react to light on nearby objects. In some patients, however, the pupil may be constricted (smaller than normal) rather than dilated. Absent or poor reflexes are also associated with this disorder. Adie Syndrome is neither progressive nor life threatening, nor is it disabling.
What are the symptoms for holmes-adie syndrome?
Poor reflexes symptom was found in the holmes-adie syndrome condition
Normally the pupil gets smaller (constricts) in the presence of light or when focusing on nearby objects. The pupil normally opens wider (dilates) in dim light or darkness, when focusing on far away objects, or when a person is excited.
In most patients with Adie syndrome the affected pupil is larger than normal (dilated) all the time and does not constrict very much or not at all in response to direct light. In many cases it is not ideally round but slightly ovally distorted. The pupil will constrict slowly when focusing (=accommodating) on objects close at hand (normally referred to as near response). If the pupil is observed with a loupe or microscope a typical behavior can be observed both spontaneously or during near response: Some sectors of the sphincter muscles constrict and others don’t. This reminds of the movement of an earthworm. Eventually, after months or years, the pupil, which was initially larger than the unaffected pupil, will become smaller than the unaffected pupil. When no longer focusing on the close at hand object, the affected pupil may remain smaller than normal or grow larger (re-dilate) at an abnormally slow rate, sometimes taking as long as several minutes to return to its original (i.e. dilated) size. Some individuals may not have symptoms associated with the affected pupil. Sometimes blurry vision or sensitivity to bright lights (photophobia) can occur.
Individuals with Adie syndrome have absent or poor (sluggish) deep tendon reflexes as well. Deep tendon reflexes are involuntary muscle contractions that occur to a sudden stimulus. For example, the patellar reflex occurs in the area just below the kneecap (patella). A physician may tap this area with a small rubber hammer, which should cause the lower leg to kick out; in individuals with Adie syndrome this reflex response is poor or does not occur.
Headache, facial pain, or emotional fluctuations may occur in some patients. The disorder does not ordinarily cause severe disability. Adie syndrome usually affects the pupil of one eye, although the other eye may eventually become affected as well.
There have been some reports in the medical literature that individuals with Adie syndrome may experience other abilities of autonomic function such as issues with cardiovascular function.
What are the causes for holmes-adie syndrome?
In most instances, the exact cause of Adie syndrome is unknown (idiopathic). It is believed that most cases result from inflammation or damage to the ciliary ganglion, a cluster of nerve cells found in the eye socket (orbit) just behind the eyes, or damage to the post-ganglionic nerves. The ciliary ganglion is part of the parasympathetic nervous system, which is itself part of the autonomic nervous system. The parasympathetic nervous system relaxes the body and inhibits or slows down high energy functions.
The ciliary ganglion supplies nerves (innervates) to the eye. These nerves carry signals that help to control the pupil’s response to stimuli such as growing smaller or larger in response to light, dark or other stimuli. These nerves communicate with the iris sphincter muscle, the muscle that controls how much light enters the pupil (causing the pupil to either contract or grow larger). However, most of the cells of the ciliary ganglion (97%) serve accommodation and supply the ciliary muscle which adjusts the crystalline lens of the eye to near vision.
In Adie syndrome, both these nerve cells are damaged. Because there are so many nerve cells serving accommodation usually a sufficient amount survive. Therefore, accommodation difficulties are not obvious or less obvious. Eventually, the damaged nerves may regenerate, but some do so improperly (aberrant regeneration). Because the nerve cells serving the pupillary sphincter are very few it is unlikely that many of them regenerate and restore the pupillary light reflex. However, cells that supply the ciliary muscle may regenerate and innervate not only the ciliary muscle but also the pupillary sphincter muscle (aberrant regeneration). This explains why the near response in a tonic pupil is present but slow. It is being elicited by nerve cells that were designed for accommodation, a slower movement than pupillary constriction. In most instances, damage to the ciliary ganglion or the postganglionic nerves is believed to be caused by a viral infection. There is evidence that also autoimmune processes may play a role. Tumor, trauma, and inflammation (especially syphilis) have also been linked to Adie syndrome. The syndrome has also occurred as a complication of surgery to the area of the eye socket. It is also seen in giant cell arteritis, a severe vasculitis of the elderly. There are rare cases where a tonic pupil has occurred as a paraneoplastic disorder, but so far only in patients were the malignant disease already was known.
The loss of deep tendon reflexes is believed to be caused by damage to the dorsal root ganglions, a cluster of nerve cells in the root of spinal nerves.
What are the treatments for holmes-adie syndrome?
In most instances, treatment will not be necessary. Glasses may be prescribed to correct blurred vision; sunglasses can help individuals with sensitivity to light. Therapy using dilute pilocarpine may improve poor depth perception and relieve glare in some patients. The loss of deep tendon reflexes is permanent.
What are the risk factors for holmes-adie syndrome?
Adie syndrome affects females more often than males by a ratio by some estimates of 2.6:1 for cases where the cause is unknown. Young adults usually between the ages of 25 to 45 are most commonly affected. The prevalence of Adie’s pupil (not the full syndrome) is approximately 2 people per 1,000 in the general population. The exact incidence or prevalence of Adie syndrome itself is unknown.
Is there a cure/medications for holmes-adie syndrome?
Adie syndrome, also known as Holmes-Adie syndrome, is a rare genetic condition that affects the eye's pupil. Most patients have dilated pupils, which are bigger than normal and slow to respond to bright light. Tendon reflexes can be absent or weak, which is another symptom of this condition. The origin of Adie syndrome is typically unclear (idiopathic), however, it can also be brought on by other disorders such trauma, surgery, ischemia, or infection. Holmes-adie syndrome is occasionally linked to localized sweat secretion abnormalities (Ross syndrome). The autonomic nervous system, or the part of the nervous system that controls or regulates some involuntary body functions such as the response of the pupils to stimuli, is damaged in holmes-adie syndrome, which is often non-progressive and limited.
Cure or medication for the holmes-adie syndrome
1. Most of the time, treatment is not required.
2. Blurred vision can be treated using glasses, and people who are light-sensitive can benefit from sunglasses.
3. Some individuals may benefit from therapy that uses diluted pilocarpine to enhance their poor depth perception and reduce glare. Deep tendon reflexes are permanently lost.
4. Adie pupil, lack of deep tendon reflexes, and a decreased capacity to sweat normally (anhidrosis) are all symptoms of the Holmes-Adie syndrome variant known as Ross syndrome.
5. The body may attempt to make up for its failure to sweat appropriately by over-sweating in some parts of the body.
6. Due to abnormal sweating, affected people may become heat-intolerant. Ross syndrome has been documented in the medical literature in more than 40 cases.
7. This disorder's precise underlying ontology is not understood.
Symptoms
The pupil is larger than normal (dilated) all the time and does not constrict very much or not at all in response to direct light,In many cases it is not ideally round but slightly ovally distorted,Blurry vision or sensitivity to bright lights (photophobia)
Conditions
One eye with a pupil that is larger than normal and constricts slowly in bright light (tonic pupil), along with the absence of deep tendon reflexes, usually in the Achilles tendon
Drugs
Therapies