Raeder’s paratrigeminal neuralgia

Two essential components 1) :

1. unilateral oculosympathetic paresis (AKA partial Horner syndrome (HS); this usually lacks anhidrosis, and in this syndrome, possibly ptosis also)

2. homolateral trigeminal nerve involvement (usually tic-like pain, but may be analgesia or masseter weakness; pain, if present, must be tic-like and does not include e.g. unilateral head, face, or vascular pain)

Localizing value of syndrome: region adjacent to trigeminal nerve in middle fossa. The cause is often not determined, but may rarely be due to aneurysm 2) compressing V1 with sympathetic.

Localizing value of syndrome: region adjacent to trigeminal nerve in middle fossa. The cause is often not determined, but may rarely be due to aneurysm 3) compressing V1 with sympathetics.

1)
Mokri B. Raeder's Paratrigeminal Syndrome. Arch Neurol. 1982; 39:395–399
2) , 3)
Kashihara K, Ito H, Yamamoto S, et al. Raeder's Syndrome Associated with Intracranial Internal Carotid Artery Aneurysm. Neurosurgery. 1987; 20: 49–51