Clinical Radiology
Volume 63, Issue 5 , Pages 499-505, May 2008

Imaging of Horner's syndrome

  • A. George
  • ,
  • A.A. Haydar
  • ,
  • W.M. Adams

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationGuarantor and correspondent: W.M. Adams, Derriford Hospital Plymouth, Derriford, Plymouth PL6 8DH, UK. Tel.: +44 1752 517917; fax: +44 1752 763277.

Derriford Hospital Plymouth, Derriford, Plymouth, UK

Received 25 September 2007; received in revised form 10 December 2007; accepted 14 December 2007.

Horner's syndrome, or oculosympathetic paresis, results from interruption of the sympathetic trunk innervation to the eye and presents typically with meiosis, ptosis and facial anhydrosis on the affected side.1 The pathological process ranges from benign, such as cluster headache, or life threatening, such as lung malignancy. Appropriate imaging requires an anatomical appreciation of the complex and circuitous route the neuronal pathway takes as it passes from the central nervous system to the eye.

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PII: S0009-9260(08)00012-3

doi:10.1016/j.crad.2007.12.006

Clinical Radiology
Volume 63, Issue 5 , Pages 499-505, May 2008