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Clinical anatomy of facial nerve and facial nerve palsy

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Clinical anatomy of facial nerve and facial nerve palsy

  1. 1. Dr.Ramesh Parajuli,MS Chitwan Medical College Teaching Hospital,Bharatpur-10,Chitwan, Nepal
  2. 2. Anatomy of Facial Nerve Mixed nerve 1. Motor: supply to the facial muscles 2. Sensory: Sensory root (Nervus intermedius/Wrisberg) joins motor root at fundus of Internal Auditory Canal(IAC) -part of post-aural / concha / ext. auditory canal,supratonsillar fossa 3. Secretomotor: lacrimal, submandibular, sublingual 4.Taste: anterior 2/3rd of tongue (via chorda tympani nerve)
  3. 3. • Originates from facial motor nucleus (Pons) • Facial nerve hooks around the nucleus of sixth nerve (abducent) (brain-stem lesions involving the 7th nerve also usually involve the 6th nerve) • Exits the brainstem at the Ponto-medullary junction • By the lateral end(fundus) of the IAC, the facial nerve has merged with the nervus intermedius(sensory root)
  4. 4. Course of facial nerve
  5. 5. Parts of facial nerve Intracranial part: from pons to Internal auditory canal(IAC) within cerebello-pontine angle(CPA) Intra-temporal part: from IAC to stylomastoid foramen • Meatal segment • Labyrinthine segment • Tympanic segment • Mastoid segment Extra-temporal part(Neck and parotid gland part From stylomastoid foramen to termination of its peripheral branches Extra-parotid & Intra-parotid (terminal)
  6. 6. 1. Supranuclear: Fibers in cerebral cortex to brain stem 2. Brain stem: Motor nucleus of facial nerve (pons) 3. Intra-cranial (16mm): Brain stem to entry into IAC 4. Meatal (8 mm): Within Internal Auditory Canal 5. Labyrinthine (4 mm): Fundus of I.A.C. to Geniculate ganglion 6. Tympanic/Horizontal segment (11 mm): Geniculate ganglion to pyramid 7. Mastoid/Vertical segment(13 mm): Pyramid to stylomastoid foramen 8. Extra-temporal : Stylomastoid foramen to pes anserinus Segments of Facial Nerve
  7. 7. Branches of facial nerve 1.Greater superficial petrosal nerve(GSPN): arises from geniculate ganglion 2.Stapedius: arises at the level of second genu 3.Chorda tympani: arises from middle of mastoid segment Branches in the neck: 4.Post auricular: muscles of auricle and occipital muscle 5.Stylohyoid 6.Posterior belly of digastric Peripheral branches: temporal, zygomatic, buccal, marginal mandibular, cervical
  8. 8. Intra-tympanic branches
  9. 9. Extra-tympanic branches
  10. 10. For middle ear and mastoid surgery 1. Processus cochleariform: small bony protuberance, geniculate ganglion anterior 2. Short process of Incus: nerve medial 3. Lateral/Horizontal SCC: nerve runs below 4. Oval window: nerve rurns above 5. Pyramid: nerve runs behind 6. Tympanomastoid suture: nerve runs behind 7. Digastric ridge: nerve at anterior end Surgical landmarks of facial nerve
  11. 11. For parotid surgery: 1. Tympano-mastoid suture: 6-8 mm deep to this suture 2. Groove between mastoid & bony EAC: bisected by facial nerve 3. Tragal pointer: 1 cm antero-infero- medial is facial nerve 4. Styloid process: lateral lies facial nerve 5. Posterior belly of digastric: superior & parallel lies facial nerve
  12. 12. Lesions of Facial Nerve
  13. 13. 1. Idiopathic: Bell’s palsy Melkersson Rosenthal syndrome 2. Temporal bone trauma: Road traffic accident 3. Infection: C.S.O.M., Herpes Zoster oticus Malignant otitis externa 4. Neoplasm: Parotid tumors, Acoustic Neuroma, Glomus tumors, Malignancy of ear 5. Congenital: Moebius syndrome 6. Iatrogenic: Mastoidectomy, Parotid surgery 7. Metabolic: Diabetes mellitus, Hypertension Etiology of Facial Nerve Palsy
  14. 14. Grade Name Characteristics I Neuropraxia Partial block of axoplasm II Axonotemesis Injury to axon III Neurotemesis Injury to endoneurium or myelin sheath IV Partial transection Injury to perineurium V Complete transection Injury to epineurium Sunderland’s Classification (1951)
  15. 15. Grade Description Characteristics I Normal Normal facial function II Mild dysfunction Slight weakness seen only on close inspection III Moderate dysfunction Obvious asymmetry; complete eye closure IV Moderately severe dysfunction Obvious asymmetry; incomplete eye closure V Severe dysfunction Only minimal motion seen; asymmetry at rest VI Total paralysis No movement House Brackmann Classification (post-injury)
  16. 16. Diagnosis • Topo-diagnostic Tests • Electrical Tests • Magnetic stimulation of intra-cranial facial nerve • CT scan temporal bone: for progressive palsy • MRI brain • Surgical exploration
  17. 17. Topo-diagnostic tests • Audiometry: cochlear nerve function • Vestibulometry: vestibular function • Schirmer’s test: Greater Superficial Petrosal Nerve • Stapedial reflex test: Nerve to stapedius • Electrogustometry: Chorda tympani • Submandibular salivary flow: Chorda tympani • Examination for terminal facial nerve branches
  18. 18. Schirmer’s Test
  19. 19. Stapedial Reflex
  20. 20. Electrogustometry Measures minimum amount of current required to excite sensation of taste
  21. 21. Muscles supplied by terminal branches
  22. 22. Temporal branch
  23. 23. Zygomatic branch
  24. 24. Buccal branch
  25. 25. Marginal mandibular
  26. 26. Cervical
  27. 27. • Nerve Excitability Test • Maximal stimulation test • Electro-neuronography Electrical tests
  28. 28. Electromyography Responses Polyphasic potentials Fibrillation potentials Re-innervation of muscles Denervation of muscles
  29. 29. Bell’s Palsy • Acute onset, idiopathic, unilateral, self-limiting, non- progressive, peripheral facial nerve palsy • 85% start recovering within 3 weeks • Etiology: 1. Viral: Herpes simplex, Herpes Zoster 2. Ischemia of facial nerve: exposure to cold, emotional stress, nerve compression 3. Hereditary 4. Autoimmune
  30. 30. Clinical Features • Loss of forehead wrinkles • Inability to close eyes • Wide palpebral fissure • Epiphora • Loss of naso-labial fold • Drooping of angle of mouth • Dribbling of food while chewing on affected side
  31. 31. Medical treatment • Prednisolone (1mg/kg in 2 doses): for 2 - 3 weeks • Acyclovir: 200-400 mg 5 times per day X 7days • Eye care: Voluntary closure @ 2 / min. Ciplox eye drops 2 hourly & ointment H.S. Eye cover at night. • Physiotherapy: moist heat + facial massage + facial muscle exercise • Electrical stimulation of facial nerve & muscle • Facial nerve decompression: Controversial
  32. 32. Surgical Treatment for Facial Nerve Injury A. Facial nerve decompression: till meatal foramen B. Neurorrhaphy (Nerve repair) 1. Direct end to end anastomosis 2. Interposition Cable grafting: sural, greater auricular C. Nerve Transposition: hypoglossal-facial D. Muscle Transposition: temporalis, masseter E. Micro-neuro-vascular muscle flaps
  33. 33. Thank you

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