Facial reanimation Flashcards
1
Q
Describe Frey’s Syndrome
A
- aberrant reinnervation of sweat glands by auriculotemporal N (carries sympathetic fibers to the sweat glands of the scalp & parasympathetic fibers to the parotid. If cut + inappropriate regeneration, fibers my switch courses)
- Diagnosis: minors starch iodine test
- Medical treatment: scopolamine (topical anticholinergic cream), glycopyrrolate, botox
- Surgical treatment: skin excision or interpositional flaps (dermal/fat graft, AlloDerm, SMAS, TPF, pedicled ms flap e.g. SCM)
2
Q
List muscles innervated by facial nerve that are not grouped as a muscle of facial expression
A
- stapedius
- auricularis posterior
- occipitalis
- stylohyoid
- posterior belly digastric
3
Q
what muscles of facial expression are innervated by superficial surface?
A
- buccinator
- levator anguli oris
- mentalis
- BLOAM
4
Q
Describe the intra-cranial & intra-temporal course and branches of facial nerve
A
Intracranial:
- Facial nucleus is at pons, between abducens and vestibulocochlear
- emerges from brainstem via cerebellar pontine angle
- travels alongside the nervus intermedius (sensory component)
Intratemporal
- enters petrous temporal bone at internal auditory canal
- travels w CNVIII for 8-12 (14-16mm)
- then enters the fallopian canal by itself; there are 3 segments:
- LABRYNTHINE
- location of geniculate ganglion; facial n entering geniculate ganglion represents “1st turn)
- nervus intermedius joins motor component at geniculate ganglion
- narrowest part of intra-temporal course (most prone to injury or compression)
- gives off greater petrosal nerve (parasymp branch to lacrimal) & other petrosal nerves
- Tympanic
- horizontal, 2nd turn, no branches
- Mastoid
- from tympanic cavity to stylomastoid foramen
- gives off
- nerve to stapedius (dampens noise, dysfxn = hyperacusis)
- sensory auricular branch
- chorda tympani: parasymp to subling/subMd & special sensory to anterior 2/3 tongue taste
5
Q
Describe the extratemporal course of the facial nerve
A
- exits stylomastoid foramen
- gives posterior auricular n (auricularis posterior, occipitalis); nerve to posterior belly digastric, nerve to stylohyoid
- travels anterior to posterior belly digastric, lateral to styloid process, behind facial vein, passes through retromandibular fossa to enter the parotid
- travels between the superficial and deep lobes in parotid
- splits into temporo-facial and cervico-facial branches ~ at level of mandibular neck
- at superior/anterior/inferior margin of parotid, 5 facial nerve branches exit
- here travel deep to SMAS (but above level of parotomasseteric fascia)
6
Q
List communications the FN has with other cranial nerves:
A
- CN V
- V1: with lacrimal nerve to lacrimal gland, parasymp innervation
- V2: w greater palatine to innervate nasal muscosa
- V3: w lingual n via chorda tympani to submandibular and sublingual glands
- VII - interconnecting branches between buccal and zygomatic branches
- VIII - as they leave cranial fossa to internal auditory canal
- X - sensory innervation to EAM
7
Q
A