We report on two patients with ocular myasthenia gravis who received rocuronium, followed later by sugammadex to reverse neuromuscular blockade. Recovery was monitored simultaneously at the adductor pollicis muscle (APM) and the corrugator supercilii muscle (CSM). Two patients with ocular myasthenia gravis (case 1: 74 yr-old female, 54 kg; case 2: 71 yr-old male, 72 kg) were scheduled for surgery under general anesthesia. Neuromuscular blockade was induced with rocuronium 0.3 mg center dot kg(-1) after placing two separate monitors at the APM and the CSM, respectively. Additional doses of rocuronium 0.1-0.2 mg center dot kg(-1) were given to maintain neuromuscular blockade at fewer than two twitches at the APM during surgery. Train-of-four response at the CSM did not show recovery of the twitch after its initial disappearance. At the end of surgery, sugammadex was administered. Twitch height at the APM recovered to the control value in 12 min (case 1) and 13 min (case 2) after sugammadex administration; however, twitch height at the CSM took 26 min (case 1) and 14 min (case 2) to recover to the control value. After rocuronium-induced paralysis in both patients with ocular myasthenia, spontaneous recovery and sugammadex-assisted recovery were slower at the CSM than at the APM. In patients without the disorder, CSM recovery is faster than APM recovery. Thus, in ocular myasthenia gravis, neuromuscular recovery at the APM may not reflect recovery of all muscles.