Title: Facial Nerve Paralysis
1Facial Nerve Paralysis
- ?.?. ?????????? ????????????????
2Outlines
- Anatomy
- Classification
- Evaluation
- Electrodiagnosis testing
- Management
- Bells palsy ,Ramse Hunt syndrome
- Temporal bone fracture
3Anatomy of Facial nerve
- The facial nerve contains approximately 10,000
fibers - 7000 myelinated fibers innervate the muscles of
facial expression, stapedius muscle,
postauricular muscles, posterior belly of
digastric muscle, and platysma - 3000 fibers form the nervus intermedius (Nerve of
Wrisberg) - sensory fibers (taste) from the anterior 2/3 of
the tongue - taste fibers from soft palate via palatine and
greater petrosal nerve - parasympathetic secretomotor fibers to the
parotid, submandibular, sublingual, and lacrimal
gland
4Anatomy of Facial nerve
- 1) Intracranial part
- Supranuclear segment
- Nuclear segment
- Infranuclear segment
- Cerebellopontine angle
- Internal acoustic canal
- Labyrinthine segment
- Tympanic segment
- Mastoid segment
- 2) Extracranial part
5Supranuclear segment
- Cerebral cortex ? Corticobulbar tract ? Facial
nucleus (pons) - Upper face ? crossed uncrossed
- Lower face ? crossed only
6Nuclear segment
- Facial motor nucleus
- lower 1/3 of Pons
- abducent nucleus
- Out from brain stem at pons recess between olive
and inferior cerebellar peduncle
7(No Transcript)
8Nervous intermedius
- Parasympathetic secretory fibers arise from
superior salivatory nucleus - These preganglionic fibers travel to the
submandibular ganglion via the chorda tympani
nerve to innervate the submandibular and
sublingual glands - And to sphenopalatine ganglion via greater
superficial petrosal nerve to innervate lacrimal,
nasal, and palatine gland
9Nervous intermedius
- Secretory fibers of lesser superficial petrosal
nerve tranverse tympanic plexus, synapse in otic
ganglion, and travel via auriculotemporal nerve
to innervate parotid gland - Taste fibers from anterior 2/3 of tongue reach
geniculate ganglion via chorda tympani nerve and
from there travel to the nucleus of the tractus
solitarius
10(No Transcript)
11Infranuclear segment
- Cerebellopontine angle
- Internal acoustic canal
- Labyrinthine segment
- Tympanic segment
- Mastoid segment
12Cerebellopontine angle
- The facial nerve and nervus intermedius exit the
brain stem at the pontomedullary junction and
travel with CN VIII to enter the internal
acoustic meatus
13Internal acoustic canal
- Motor facial nerve (medial)
- Nervus intermedius (between)
- Acoustic nerve (lateral)
14Labyrinthine segment
- Fallopian canal
- Shortest Narrowest part
- Temporal bone
- Facial nerve enter fallopian canal until middle
ear - First genu
- Geniculate ganglion
- Branches
- Greater superficial petrosal nerve ? lacrimal
gland - Lessor superficial petrosal nerve ? parotid gland
15(No Transcript)
16Tympanic segment
- First genu ? above oval window ? stapes
- Second genu beyond middle ear
- Out of cranium through stylomastoid foramen
17Mastoid segment
- Stylomastoid foramen
- Branches
- Motor nerve to stapedius muscle
- Chorda tympani nerve between malleus and incus
- secretomotor Submandibular Sublingual gland
- taste fiber anterior 2/3 of tongue
18(No Transcript)
19Extracranial segment
- Posterior auricular nerve auricularis,
occipitalis and sensation at auricular, post
auricular area - Branch to posterior belly of digastric muscle and
stylohyoid muscle - Temporal branch muscle above zygoma
- Zygomatic branch orbicularis occli
- Buccal branch buccinator and upper lip
- Marginal mandibular branch orbicularis oris and
lower lip - Cervical branch platysma
20(No Transcript)
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23Physiology
- Efferent fibers from the motor nucleus
innervate muscles of facial expression,
post-auricular, stylohyoid, posterior digastric,
and stapedius muscles - Efferent fibers ANS (preganglionic
parasympathetic fiber) - sphenopalatine ganglion to lacrimal glands and
mucinous glands of nose - submandibular ganglion to submandibular and
sublingual glands
24Physiology
- Afferent fibers convey taste from anterior
two-thirds of tongue to nucleus tractus
solitarius via lingual nerve, chorda tympani, and
nervus intermedius. - Afferent fibers mediate sensation from posterior
external auditory canal, concha, ear lobe, and
deep parts of face
25Classifications of facial nerve injury
- Seddon classification of nerve injury
- Neuropraxia
- Axonotmesis
- Neurotmesis
26Classifications
- Sunderland classification of nerve injury
- 1 damage Compression
- 2 damage Interruption of axoplasm
- 3 damage Disruption of myelin
- 4 damage Disruption of perineurium,
myelin and axon - 5 damage Transection of nerve
27Sunderland Classification of nerve injury
28Nerve injury
- neurapraxia Sunderland grade 1
- axonotmesis Sunderland grade 2-3
- neurotmesis Sunderland grade 4-5
29Degeneration
- Interruption of the continuity of the axon
separates the distal axon from its metabolic
source, the neuron or cell body - Wallerian degeneration of the distal axon and
myelin sheath begins within 24 hours - Macrophages phagocytose degraded myelin and axons
30Regeneration
- Complete
- Partial
- Simple misdirection
- Clinical expression synkinesis or associated
movement - Complex misdirection
- Clinical expression mass movement
31(No Transcript)
32Differential Diagnosis
- Extracranial
- Intratemporal
- Intracranial
33Extracranial
- 1. Traumatic
- Facial lacerations
- Blunt forces
- Penetrating wounds
- Mandible fractures
- Iatrogenic injuries
- Newborn paralysis
34Extracranial
- 2. Neoplasm
- Parotid tumors
- Tumors of the external and middle ear
- Facial nerve neurinomas
- Metastatic lesions
- 3. Congenital absence of facial musculature
35Intratemporal
- 1. Traumatic
- Fractures of petrous pyramid
- Penetrating injuries
- Iatrogenic injuries
- 2. Neoplastic
- Cholesteatoma
- Facial neurinomas
- Hemangiomas
- Meningiomas
- Acoustic neurinomas
36Intratemporal
- 3. Infectious
- Herpes zoster oticus
- Acute otitis media
- Chronic otitis media
- Malignant otitis externa
- 4. Idiopathic
- Bell's palsy
- Melkersson-Rosenthal syndrome
- 5. Congenital osteopetroses
37Intracranial
- 1. Iatrogenic injury
- 2. Neoplastic
- 3. Congenital
- Mobius syndrome
- Absence of motor units
38History
- Onset
- Previous symptoms
- Complete or incomplete
- Unilateral or bilateral
- Pain
- Underlying disease (vestibulocochlear)
- Associate symptoms
- Alteration in taste or lacrimation
39History
- Family history
- Trauma
- Hx of viral infection
- Vaccination
- DM
- HTN
- Pregnancy
40Physical examination
- ENT exam
- Nervous system
- Location
- Severity
41Evaluation of Facial paralysis
- Clinical feature
- Central VS Peripheral facial paralysis
- Complete head and neck examination
- Cranial nerve evaluation
- Electrodiagnostic testing
- Topographic diagnosis
42Central facial paralysis
- Upper motor neurone lesion
- Movements of the frontal and upper orbicularis
oculi tend to be spared - Because of uncrossed contributions from
ipsilateral supranuclear areas - Involvement of tongue
- Involvement of lacrimation and salivation
43Peripheral paralysis
- Lower motor neurone lesion
- At rest
- less prominent wrinkles on forehead of affected
side, eyebrow drop, flattened nasolabial fold,
corner of mouth turned down - Unable to
- wrinkle forehead, raise eyebrow, wrinkle
nasolabial fold, purse lips, show teeth, or
completely close eye
44(No Transcript)
45House-Brackmann grading system
- Grade I - Normal
- Grade II - Mild dysfunction, slight weakness on
close inspection, normal symmetry at rest - Grade III - Moderate dysfunction, obvious but not
disfiguring difference between sides, eye can be
completely closed with effort - Grade IV - Moderately severe, normal tone at
rest, obvious weakness or asymmetry with
movement, incomplete closure of eye - Grade V - Severe dysfunction, only barely
perceptible motion, asymmetry at rest - Grade VI - No movement
46Topographic Diagnosis
- To determine the anatomical level of a peripheral
lesion - Lacrimation ? Geniculate ganglion
- Stapedius reflex ? motor nerve of stapedius
muscle - Taste ? chorda tympani
47Schirmer's Test
- Geniculate ganglion petrosal nerve function
test - Schirmers test ve when
- Affected side shows less than half the amount of
lacrimation seen on the normal side - Sum of the lengths of wetted filter paper for
both eyes less than 25 mm - Lesion at or proximal to the geniculate ganglion
48Stapedius reflex
- Nerve to stapedius muscle test
- Impedance audiometry can record the presence or
absence of stapedius muscle contraction to sound
stimuli 70 to 100 dB above hearing threshold - An absence reflex or a reflex less than half the
amplitude is due to a lesion proximal to
stapedius nerve
49Taste (Electrogustometry)
- Chorda tympani nerve test
- Solution of salt, sugar, citrate, quinine or
Electrical stimulation - Compares amount of current require for a response
each side of tongue - Normal difference lt 20 uAmp (thresholds
differening by more than 25 abnormal) - Total lack of Chorda tympani No response at 300
uAmp - Disadvantage False ve in acute phase of Bells
palsy
50(No Transcript)
51Minimal stimulation test
- ???????????????????????????? ? ?????
???????????????? ????????????????????????????????
???????? - ????????????????????????????
- neurapraxia ??????????????????????????????????????
???????????? - axonotmesis ??????????????????????????????????????
??????????????????????????????????????????????????
?? - neurotmesis ????????????????????????????????
52Minimal stimulation test
- ????????????????????????????????????
- ???????? ? ???????????????????????????????????????
?????????????????????????????????????? - ???????????????????
- ?????????????????????????????????????????????????
- ???????????????????? 3.5 mA ? Wallerian
degeneration
53Maximal stimulation test (MST)
- ??????????????????????????????????? neurapraxia
??????? axon ?????????????????????????????????????
?????????????????????? - ??????????????????????????? axonotmesis ???????
axon ?????????????????????????????????????????????
????????????????????????????????? - ???????????????????? neurotmesis
??????????????????????????????????????????????????
????????????????????
54Maximal stimulation test (MST)
- ????????????????? 5 mA ?????????????????????????
??????? - ??????????????? ????????? ???? 2
?????????????????? - ?????????????????? facial nerve
????????????????????????????? ?????? 12 - ????????????????? ????????????????????????????
?????? 73 - ?????????????????? facial nerve
????????????????????? ?? misdirection ????
55Electroneurography (ENOG )
- ???????????????????? MST
- ????????????????????? ??????????????????
summating potential - ??????????????????????????? amplitude
???????????????????????????????????? - ??? amplitude ??? SP ????????????????????????????
???????????? 5-10 ??????????????????????????
90-95 ?????????????????? facial nerve
?????????????????? ????? misdirection???
56Electromyography (EMG)
- ??????????????????????????????????????????????????
?? - ???????????????????? facial palsy ?????????????
10 ??? - ???????????????? Wallerian degeneration
??????????????????????????????????????????????????
???????????????????????? - ????????? fibrillatioin ??????? facial nerve
????????????????????? - ????????? motor unit potential
??????????????????????????????????????????????????
???????????
57Limitation of Electrodiagnostic testing
- ??????????????????????????????????????????????????
??? 72 ??????? - ??????? EMG ?????????????????????????????????????
??? 10 ??? - ??????????????????????????????
?????????????????????????????? (?????? EMG)
58Management
- Extracranial etiology
- Trauma
- Iatrogenic
- Neoplasm
- Intratemporal etiology
- Fracture
- Iatrogenic
- Neoplasm
- Idiopathic (Bells palsy)
- Infection
59Idiopathic facial palsy (Bell's Palsy)
- Most common cause of facial paralysis (gt50 of
case) - Most age 25-30 yrs.
- Male Female 1 1
- Left side Right side 1 1
- Unilateral gt bilateral
- Increase risk in
- pregnancy 3.3 times
- DM 4.5 times
- Recurrent rate 10
- 60 have previous URI
60Etiology
- Unknown
- Microcirculatory failure of vasa nervorum
- Viral infection (HSV)
- Ischemic neuropathy
- Autoimmune reaction
- Entrapment theory
61Diagnosis
- By exclusion
- Criteria
- Paralysis or paresis of all muscle groups of one
side of the face - Sudden onset
- Absence of signs of CNS disease
- Absence of signs of ear or CPA disease
62Medical treatment
- Corticosteroids
- prednisolone 1 mg/kg/day 7-10 days
- Corticosteroids combine with antiviral drug is
better - Acyclovir 400 mg 5 times/day
- Famciclovir and valacyclovir 500 mg bid
63Surgical treatment
- Facial nerve decompression
- Indication
- Completely paralysis
- ENOG less than 10 in 2 weeks
- Appropriate time for surgery is 2-3 weeks after
paralysis
64Herpes Zoster Oticus (Ramsay Hunt Syndrome)
- 3rd most common of peripheral facial paralysis
(10) - Aged gt 60 yrs. or low immune (low CMIR)
- Virus travels to the dorsal root extramedullary
cranial nerve ganglion - Infected of HZV at auricular, external canal or
face - Prodromal symptoms very similar to those seen in
Bell's palsy - but usually more severe
65Herpes Zoster Oticus (Ramsay Hunt Syndrome)
- Symptoms include severe otalgia, facial
paralysis, facial numbness, and a vesicular
eruption on the concha, external auditory canal,
and palate - Facial paralysis hearing loss vertigo ?
canal paralysis - Pathophysiology treatment liked in Bell s
palsy
66Temporal bone fractures
- Longitudinal fracture
- Transverse fracture
- Mixed fracture
67Temporal bone fractures
- Signs
- bleeding from the external canal
- hemotympanum
- step-deformity of the osseous canal
- conductive hearing loss (longitudinal fracture)
- sensorineural hearing loss (transverse fracture)
- CSF otorrhea
- facial nerve involvement (20 of longitudinal
fractures and 50 of transverse fractures)
68Longitudinal VS Transverse
Type of injury Longitudinal Transverse
Incidence 70-90 10-20
Site of injury Temporal , Parietal area Occipital , Frontal area
69 Origin of fracture site Temporal squama Foramen magnum
Direction of injury Posterosuperior of EAC cross roof of middle ear along carotid canal anterior to labyrinthine capsule Between various foramen Jugular F. Hypoglosal F. Labyrinthine capsule
70Insertion middle cranial fossa middle cranial fossa
Tympanic mb. Middle ear Inner ear ??????????? ?????????????????? ???????????????? ????, hemotympanum ????????? ??????????????????
Hearing loss Vertigo CHL No SNHL Common
71Facial paralysis Onset 20-25 Delayed, transient 50 Immediate, permanent
Site of lesion Tympanic segment , Perigeniculate ganglion Labyrinthine segment
CSF otorrhea No Common
72Cardinal SS 1.Bleeding from ear 2.CHL 3.Battles sign 1.VertigoNystagmus 2.SNHL 3.Facial paralysis 4.Hemotympanum
CT-scan Axial sagital section Coronal 20degree coronal oblique section
73Prognosis
- Immediate onset paralysis poor prognosis
- Delayed onset paralysis good prognosis
- All case of paralysis ? electrical testing
74Treatment
- Surgery is treatment of choice
- Indications for facial nerve exploration
- incomplete paralysis
- iatrogenic paralysis
- Contraindications any case have no poor
prognostic factors
75Complications
- Complications of facial nerve decompression
- dural tears
- conductive or sensorineural hearing loss
- vestibular function loss
- persistent CSF leaks
- meningitis
- injury to the anterior inferior cerebellar artery
(AICA) or its branches