scholarly journals Differences in the Diameter of Facial Nerve and Facial Canal in Bell’s Palsy—A 3-Dimensional Temporal Bone Study

2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 514-518 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa Vianna ◽  
Meredith Adams ◽  
Patricia Schachern ◽  
Paulo Roberto Lazarini ◽  
Michael Mauro Paparella ◽  
...  
1987 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 25-30 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Wadin ◽  
L. Thomander ◽  
H. Wilbrand

The reproducibility of the labyrinthine portion of the facial canal by computed tomography was investigated in 22 patients with Bell's palsy. The CT images were compared with those obtained in 18 temporal bone specimens. Measurements of the diameters of different parts of the facial canal were made on these images and also microscopically in plastic casts of the temporal bone specimens. No marked difference was found between the dimensions of the labyrinthine portion of the facial canal of the involved and healthy temporal bone in the patient, nor did these differ from the dimensions in the specimens. CT of the slender, curved labyrinthine portion was found to be of doubtful value for metric estimation of small differences in width. The anatomic variations of the canal rendered the evaluation more difficult. CT with a slice thickness of 2 mm was of no value for assessment of this part of the canal. Measurement of the diameters of the labyrinthine portion on CT images is an inappropriate and unreliable method for clinical purposes.


1977 ◽  
Vol 86 (4) ◽  
pp. 549-558 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ruth Gussen

The pathogenesis of Bell's palsy is presented as retrograde epineurial compression edema with ischemia of the facial nerve. Although the etiology is unknown, an attractive theory is vasospasm, from any cause, along any facial nerve branch, with the chorda tympani, perhaps, the usual primary involvement. Retrograde vascular distension and edema, within the epineurium of the bony facial canal, compresses the nerve from outside its perineurial sheath. The compression force may be mild or severe, resulting in varying degrees of reversible or irreversible ischemic degeneration of myelin sheaths and axons, with varying degrees of cellular reaction to myelin breakdown. The edema may be resorbed, leaving reversible or irreversible nerve damage, or may stimulate collagen formation within the epineurium, with persisting fibrous compression (entrapment) neuropathy of the facial nerve. This concept is consistent with the varying results of Bell's palsy, and depends on the severity and duration of edema, and whether fibrosis occurs within the epineurium of the facial canal. Epineurial fibrosis also results in disturbance of metabolic exchange through the epineurial-permeurial-endoneurial tissues, and may ultimately result in obliteration of vascular drainage. Two temporal bone cases of Bell's palsy, one occurring ten years before death, with residual paralysis. and one two years before death, with clinical recovery, are added to the previously described four cases in the literature, three of early Bell's palsy, and one of remote palsy with almost complete recovery.


1988 ◽  
Vol 97 (6_suppl3) ◽  
pp. 22-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasushi Matsumoto ◽  
Michael J. Patterson ◽  
Jack L. Pulec ◽  
Naoaki Yanagihara

Electron microscopic findings of biopsy specimens of the infratemporal facial nerve from four selected patients with Bell's palsy are described, and the results of clinical examinations and surgical findings are presented. In all specimens, wallerian degeneration of various degrees was demonstrated. In one specimen, extravascular erythrocytes, and in another, lymphatic infiltrations were noted. On the basis of the present investigation and reported temporal bone histopathologic evidence, the causes of Bell's palsy are concluded to be multiple and to be vascular, inflammatory, or degenerative.


2020 ◽  
Vol 198 ◽  
pp. 106109
Author(s):  
Onur Celik ◽  
Burak Ulkumen ◽  
Gorkem Eskiizmir ◽  
Fatma Can ◽  
Yüksel Pabuscu ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 73 (S 02) ◽  
Author(s):  
L. M. Marques ◽  
J. Pimentel ◽  
P. Escada ◽  
G. Neto D'Almeida

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Akira Inagaki ◽  
Sachiyo Katsumi ◽  
Shinji Sekiya ◽  
Shingo Murakami

AbstractIn Bell’s palsy, electrodiagnosis by electroneurography (ENoG) is widely used to predict a patient’s prognosis. The therapeutic options for patients with poor prognostic results remain controversial. Here, we investigated whether early intervention with intratympanic steroid therapy (ITST) is an effective treatment for Bell’s palsy patients with poor electrodiagnostic test results (≤ 10% electroneurography value). Patients in the concurrent ITST group (n = 8) received the standard systemic dose of prednisolone (410 mg total) and intratympanic dexamethasone (16.5 mg total) and those in the control group (n = 21) received systemic prednisolone at the standard dose or higher (average dose, 605 ± 27 mg). A year after onset, the recovery rate was higher in the ITST group than in the control group (88% vs 43%, P = 0.044). The average House-Brackmann grade was better in the concurrent ITST group (1.13 ± 0.13 vs 1.71 ± 0.16, P = 0.035). Concurrent ITST improves the facial nerve outcome in patients with poor electroneurography test results, regardless of whether equivalent or lower glucocorticoid doses were administered. This may be ascribed to a neuroprotective effect of ITST due to a higher dose of steroid reaching the lesion due to dexamethasone transfer in the facial nerve.


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