A 4-year-old boy is reviewed in the A&E department after sustaining a significant head injury. On examination, he is found to have a right-sided ptosis.
His right pupil is dilated and unreactive to light, which is considered an early sign of oculomotor nerve compression.
What is the anatomical basis for the pupillary changes preceding complete third nerve palsy?
CORRECT ANSWER:
The anatomical arrangement of the oculomotor nerve (CN III) is crucial to understanding this clinical sign. The parasympathetic fibres, which are responsible for pupillary constriction via the ciliary ganglion, are located on the superficial, dorsomedial aspect of the nerve.
This positioning makes them highly susceptible to external compressive forces, such as those from uncal herniation, a posterior communicating artery aneurysm, or tumour. Consequently, compression affects these external fibres first, leading to a loss of parasympathetic tone, unopposed sympathetic action, and thus a dilated, non-reactive pupil (mydriasis).
The motor fibres, which control the extraocular muscles (sparing the lateral rectus and superior oblique) and levator palpebrae superioris, are situated more centrally within the nerve bundle. They are therefore affected later as the compression worsens, resulting in the classic "down and out" eye position and ptosis.
WRONG ANSWER ANALYSIS:
Option B is incorrect because the sympathetic fibres travelling to the pupil do not run with the oculomotor nerve; they follow a separate pathway via the carotid plexus.
Option C is incorrect because in a compressive lesion, the mechanism is mechanical damage, not primarily ischaemia; in diabetic mononeuropathy, where ischaemia is the cause, the motor fibres are affected first, typically sparing the pupil.
Option D is incorrect as the parasympathetic fibres are superficially located, not deeply embedded, which is the very reason they are vulnerable to compression.
Option E is incorrect because the ciliary ganglion is located within the orbit, posterior to the eyeball, and is not the primary site of compression in this scenario.