| Literature DB >> 18368417 |
Abstract
Peripheral facial nerve palsy (FNP) may (secondary FNP) or may not have a detectable cause (Bell's palsy). Three quarters of peripheral FNP are primary and one quarter secondary. The most prevalent causes of secondary FNP are systemic viral infections, trauma, surgery, diabetes, local infections, tumor, immunological disorders, or drugs. The diagnosis of FNP relies upon the presence of typical symptoms and signs, blood chemical investigations, cerebro-spinal-fluid-investigations, X-ray of the scull and mastoid, cerebral MRI, or nerve conduction studies. Bell's palsy may be diagnosed after exclusion of all secondary causes, but causes of secondary FNP and Bell's palsy may coexist. Treatment of secondary FNP is based on the therapy of the underlying disorder. Treatment of Bell's palsy is controversial due to the lack of large, randomized, controlled, prospective studies. There are indications that steroids or antiviral agents are beneficial but also studies, which show no beneficial effect. Additional measures include eye protection, physiotherapy, acupuncture, botulinum toxin, or possibly surgery. Prognosis of Bell's palsy is fair with complete recovery in about 80% of the cases, 15% experience some kind of permanent nerve damage and 5% remain with severe sequelae.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18368417 PMCID: PMC2440925 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-008-0646-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 0937-4477 Impact factor: 2.503
Causes of secondary, unilateral facial nerve palsy
| Cause | Reference |
|---|---|
| Metabolic disease | |
| Diabetes | [ |
| Preeclampsia | [ |
| Stroke | |
| Ipsilateral pontine infarction | [ |
| Pontine tegmental hemorrhage | [ |
| Infection | |
| Hansen’s disease (leprosy) | [ |
| Otitis media | [ |
| Mastoiditis | [ |
| Herpes simplex infection | [ |
| Varicella zoster infection | [ |
| Ramsey–Hunt syndrome | [ |
| Influenza viruses | [ |
| Borreliosis | [ |
| Cryptococcosis | [ |
| Neurocysticercosis | [ |
| Toxocarosis | [ |
| Tuberculous meningitis | [ |
| Parotitis, parotid abscess | [ |
| Malignant external otitis | [ |
| Syphillis | [ |
| Surgery | |
| Removal of cerebellopontine angle tumours | [ |
| Trauma | |
| Head trauma (crush injury) | [ |
| Birth injury | [ |
| Tumour | |
| Facial nerve neurinoma | [ |
| Cerebello-pontine angle tumours (neurinoma) | [ |
| Pons tumour | [ |
| Tumours of the petrosal bone | [ |
| Tumours of the middle ear | [ |
| Leucemia | [ |
| Tumours of the parotid gland | [ |
| Lymphoma | [ |
| Immune system disorder | |
| Guillain–Barre syndrome | [ |
| Miller–Fisher syndrome | [ |
| Systemic lupus erythematodes | [ |
| Myasthenia gravis | [ |
| Drugs | |
| Interferon | [ |
| Linezolid | [ |
| Varia | |
| Moebius syndrome (impaired sixth’s and seventh cranial nerve) | [ |
| Melkersson–Rosenthal syndromea | [ |
| Sarkoidosis | [ |
| Histiocytosis X | [ |
| Autism | [ |
| Asperger’s syndrome (hypo/hypersensitivity to sounds) | [ |
| Parkinson syndrome | [ |
aMelkersson–Rosenthal syndrome is characterized by recurrent attacks of Bell’s palsy, painless edema of the face, cheilitis granulomatosa (lingua plicata), and fissured tongue
Fig. 1Right-sided peripheral facial nerve palsy with inability to wrinkle the forehead and nose, unequal lid fissures, and inability to lift the corner of the mouth
Causes of bilateral facial nerve palsy [93]
| Diabetes |
| Bilateral Bell’s palsy |
| Borreliosis |
| Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection |
| Guillain–Barre syndrome, Miller–Fisher syndrome |
| Sarcoidosis |
| Moebius syndrome |
| Leukemia |
| Viral infections (Herpes simplex) |
| Syphilis |
| Basal skull fractures |
| Pontine gliomas |
| Linezolid therapy |
| Leprosy |
| Mononucleosis |
| Pregnancy |
| Brainstem encephalitis |
| Hansen’s disease |
| Cryptococcal meningitis |
| Pontine tegmental hemorrhaghe |
| Systemic lupus erythematodes |
| Bulbospinal muscular atrophy |
House–Brackmann score (HBS) and Yanagihara grading system (Y-system) to grade severity of facial nerve palsy [21] by assessing motility of forehead, eye, nose, and mouth as 1–6
| Grade | HBS | Y-system |
|---|---|---|
| Normal, symmetrical function in all areas | I | 40 |
| Slight weakness on close inspection, complete eye closure with minimal effort, slight asymmetry of smile with maximal effort, slight synkinesis, absent contracture or spasm | II | 32–38 |
| Obvious weakness but not disfiguring, unable to lift eyebrow, complete and strong eye closure, asymmetrical mouth movement with maximal effort, obvious but not disfiguring synkinesis, mass movement or spasm | III | 24–30 |
| Obvious disfiguring weakness, inability to lift brow, incomplete eye closure, and asymmetry of mouth with maximal effort, severe synkinesis, mass movement, spasms | IV | 16–22 |
| Motion barely perceptible, incomplete eye closure, slight movement corner mouth, synkinesis, contracture, spasm usually absent | V | 8–14 |
| No movement, loss of tone, no synkinesis, contracture, spasm | VI | 0–6 |
Indicators for poor prognosis of Bell’s palsy
| Complete palsy |
| Absent recovery by 3 weeks |
| Age >60 years |
| Severe pain |
| Ramsey Hunt syndrome |
| Presence of conditions causing secondary facial nerve palsy |
| Reduction of the compound muscle action potential >50% |