Facial Nerve Palsy Flashcards
1
Q
Facial nerve palsy
A
Examine this patient’s cranial nerves. What is wrong?
2
Q
Clinical signs of Facial nerve palsy
A
- Unilateral facial droop, absent nasolabial fold and forehead creases
- Inability to raise the eyebrows (frontalis), screw the eyes up (orbicularis oculi) or smile (orbicularis oris)
Bell’s phenomenon: eyeball rolls upwards on attempted eye closure.
3
Q
Level of the lesion
A
-
Pons – +VI palsy and long tract signs
⚬⚬ MS and stroke -
Cerebellar‐pontine angle – +V, VI, VIII and cerebellar signs
⚬⚬ Tumour, e.g. acoustic neuroma -
Auditory/facial canal – +VIII
⚬⚬ Cholesteatoma and abscess -
Neck and face – + scars or parotid mass
⚬⚬ Tumour and trauma
4
Q
Commonest cause of Facial nerve palsy
A
Bell’s palsy
- Rapid onset (1–2 days)
- HSV‐1 has been implicated
- Induced swelling and compression of the nerve within the facial canal causes demyelination and temporary conduction block
5
Q
Treatment of Bell’s palsy
A
- Prednisolone commenced within 72 hours of onset improves outcomes, plus aciclovir if severe
- Remember eye protection (artificial tears, tape eye closed at night)
6
Q
Prognosis of Bell’s palsy
A
– 70–80% make a full recovery; substantial minority have persistent facial weakness
7
Q
Pregnancy and Bell’s palsy
A
Bell’s palsy is more common in pregnancy, and outcome may be worse.
8
Q
Other causes of a VII nerve palsy
A
- Herpes zoster (Ramsay–Hunt syndrome)
- Mononeuropathy due to diabetes, sarcoidosis or Lyme disease
- Tumour/trauma
- MS/stroke
9
Q
Causes of bilateral facial palsy
A
- Guillain–Barré
- Myasthenia gravis
- Sarcoidosis
- Bilateral Bell’s palsy
- Lyme disease