Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
When the maxillary sinus is involved, the inferior oblique muscle may be damaged. [1] The cause of silent sinus syndrome is not well understood. Bacteria in the maxillary sinus may be involved. The connection to the nose may be blocked. [1] [2] This can create negative pressure in the sinus, as secretions are reabsorbed. [1]
For many people, sinus pain is not necessarily the picture of migraine that they have in their mind's eye, she says, but migraine attacks do frequently cause sinus pressure and pain.
Sinus infections can cause pain behind the eyes, Dr. Emanuel advises. If your pain is accompanied by sinus pressure in your cheeks or gums, nasal congestion, runny nose or post-nasal drip, you may ...
The pain can ultimately become disabling unless the ambient pressure is reversed. The pressure difference causes the mucosal lining of the sinuses to become swollen and submucosal bleeding follows with further difficulties ventilating the sinus, especially if the orifices are involved. Ultimately fluid or blood will fill the space.
Pain is exacerbated by eye movements looking down and inwards, and especially in supraduction (looking up) and looking outwards, which stretches the superior oblique muscle tendon. Notably, there is no restriction of extraocular movements, no diplopia, and often no apparent ocular signs such as proptosis. However, occasionally mild ptosis is ...
Oculomotor nerve palsy or oculomotor neuropathy [1] is an eye condition resulting from damage to the third cranial nerve or a branch thereof. As the name suggests, the oculomotor nerve supplies the majority of the muscles controlling eye movements (four of the six extraocular muscles, excluding only the lateral rectus and superior oblique).
Orbital cellulitis commonly presents with painful eye movement, sudden vision loss, chemosis, bulging of the infected eye, and limited eye movement.Along with these symptoms, patients typically have redness and swelling of the eyelid, pain, discharge, inability to open the eye, occasional fever and lethargy.
Another common cause of sinus pressure is a cold or the flu. When you have a cold, your sinuses become inflamed and filled with mucus. Sickness can cause a lot of pressure in the sinuses, making ...