Write short note on Facial Palsy.
Answer. Facial palsy refers to the paralysis of facial muscles.
Facial Palsy is of two types:
1. Upper motor neuron palsy
2. Lower motor neuron palsy or Bell’s palsy:
Upper Motor Neuron Palsy
- Upper Motor Neuron Palsy affcts mainly muscles of lower part of face and is never complete.
- Upper Motor Neuron Palsy is seldomly isolated palsy.
- The emotional movements are preserved.
- There is no muscle *contracture.
- There is no reaction of degeneration.
- Electromyography and nerve conduction is normal.
Read And Learn More: General Medicine Question And Answers
Lower Motor Neuron Palsy Or Bell’S Palsy
Bell’s palsy is an acute apparently isolated, lower motor neuron facial palsy.
Facial Palsy Etiology
- Cold: It usually occurs after exposure to cold.
- Trauma: Extraction of teeth or injection of local anesthetic may damage to the nerve and subsequent paralysis.
- Surgical procedure: Such as removal of parotid gland tumor in which the facial nerve is sectioned can also cause facial paralysis.
- Tumors: Tumors of the cranial base, parapharyngeal space and infratemporal fossa after cause 7th nerve palsy.
- Familial: Familial and hereditary occurrence is also reported in case of Bell’s palsy.
- Facial canal and middle ear neoplasm.
- Herpes simplex—viral infection.
Facial Palsy Clinical Features
Facial Palsy Investigations
Electromyography is of prognostic importance.
- If signs of denervation are present after 10 days, i.e. axonal degeneration is present and recovery is incomplete or delayed.
- If there is incomplete denervation in less than 7 days the prognosis is good.
- Fibrillation potential after 2 weeks is suggestive of wallerian degeneration.
Facial Palsy Management or Facial Palsy Treatment
- Local heat: Infrared or moist heat over the face or parotid region or both if there is tenderness of nerve trunk.
- Local treatment ofmuscles: The patient should massage the facial muscles with bland oil for twice a day for 5 min.
The massaging movements should start from the chin and lower lip and are directed upwards.
With return offunction the patient should practice movements of various muscles of face before a mirror. - Prevention offacial sagging: Application of strips of adhesive tape is done to lift up the angle of mouth.
Tape is attched to the temple and extends down in a V shaped fashion to upper and lower lips. - Protection of eye: It is done with dark glass or eye patch.
Mild zinc boric solution is used to wash the eye to prevent conjunctivitis. - Corticosteroids: If seen under a week of onset. Prednisolone 40mg/day for 4 days and in tapering doses for over next 6 days helps by reducing secondary edema.
- Anti–virals: Acyclovir, Valacyclovir or Famciclovir in combination with steroids, ifstarted within 3 days ofonset.
- Surgery: Decompression of facial nerve in second or third week cannot inflence favorably natural course of Bell’s palsy. Cases which fail to recover after 9 months in them anastomosis of facial nerve with accessory or preferably hypoglossal nerve is considered, or plastic surgery in cases of total paralysis with atrophy of muscle.
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