A Rare Case of Nine Syndrome

Authors

  • Youko T. Sakurai, MD Department of Ophthalmology, Ospital ng Makati, Taguig City, Philippines Author
  • Maria Karina Montesines, MD Department of Ophthalmology, Ospital ng Makati, Taguig City, Philippines Author

Keywords:

Nine syndrome, one-and-a-half syndrome, hypertensive emergency, neuro-ophthalmology, dorsal pons

Abstract

Objective: To present a rare case of nine syndrome in a middle-aged patient with stage IV chronic kidney disease presenting with hypertensive emergency at a tertiary government hospital, and to discuss its clinical presentation, diagnostic approach, and management within the realities of limited-resource settings.

Method: This is a case report.

Result: A 45-year-old woman with uncontrolled hypertension and stage IV chronic kidney disease came to the emergency department with acute dizziness and vomiting. On neurologic examination, she had left horizontal conjugate gaze palsy and an adduction deficit of the left eye with intact abduction and an abducting nystagmus of the right eye consistent with one-and-a-half syndrome. In addition, she had left-sided facial weakness and right lower limb weakness suggesting nine syndrome. Brain imaging confirmed a left posterior pontine infarct. Treatment for neuroprotection and blood pressure control led to significant improvement in ocular symptoms and muscle strength.

Conclusion: This report describes a rare case of nine syndrome. Careful bedside neuro-ophthalmologic examination, supported by MRI, enabled accurate localization to the paramedian pons. Early recognition allowed timely stroke management and initiation of secondary management, even in a resource-limited setting.

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Published

2025-12-10

Issue

Section

Case Report