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The role of facial canal diameter in the pathogenesis and grade of Bell's palsy: a study by high resolution computed tomography

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TLDR
The diameter of labyrinthine segment of facial canal is found as an anatomic risk factor for Bell's palsy and significant relationship between the HB grade and FC diameter at the level of second genu is found.
Abstract
Introduction The exact etiology of Bell's palsy still remains obscure. The only authenticated finding is inflammation and edema of the facial nerve leading to entrapment inside the facial canal. Objective To identify if there is any relationship between the grade of Bell's palsy and diameter of the facial canal, and also to study any possible anatomic predisposition of facial canal for Bell's palsy including parts which have not been studied before. Methods Medical records and temporal computed tomography scans of 34 patients with Bell's palsy were utilized in this retrospective clinical study. Diameters of both facial canals (affected and unaffected) of each patient were measured at labyrinthine segment, geniculate ganglion, tympanic segment, second genu, mastoid segment and stylomastoid foramen. The House-Brackmann (HB) scale of each patient at presentation and 3 months after the treatment was evaluated from their medical records. The paired samples t -test and Wilcoxon signed-rank test were used for comparison of width between the affected side and unaffected side. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was also used for evaluation of relationship between the diameter of facial canal and the grade of the Bell's palsy. Significant differences were established at a level of p  = 0.05 (IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 21.0.; Armonk, NY, IBM Corp). Results Thirty-four patients – 16 females, 18 males; mean age ± Standard Deviation, 40.3 ± 21.3 - with Bell's palsy were included in the study. According to the HB facial nerve grading system; 8 patients were grade V, 6 were grade IV, 11 were grade III, 8 were grade II and 1 patient was grade I. The mean width at the labyrinthine segment of the facial canal in the affected temporal bone was significantly smaller than the equivalent in the unaffected temporal bone ( p  = 0.00). There was no significant difference between the affected and unaffected temporal bones at the geniculate ganglion ( p  = 0.87), tympanic segment ( p  = 0.66), second genu ( p  = 0.62), mastoid segment ( p  = 0.67) and stylomastoid foramen ( p  = 0.16). We did not find any relationship between the HB grade and the facial canal diameter at the level of labyrinthine segment ( p  = 0.41), tympanic segment ( p  = 0.12), mastoid segment ( p  = 0.14), geniculate ganglion ( p  = 0.13) and stylomastoid foramen ( p  = 0.44), while we found significant relationship at the level of second genu ( p  = 0.02). Conclusion We found the diameter of labyrinthine segment of facial canal as an anatomic risk factor for Bell's palsy. We also found significant relationship between the HB grade and FC diameter at the level of second genu. Future studies (MRI-CT combined or 3D modeling) are needed to promote this possible relevance especially at second genu. Thus, in the future it may be possible to selectively decompress particular segments in high grade BP patients.

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The etiology of Bell’s palsy: a review

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Acute Peripheral Facial Palsy: Recent Guidelines and a Systematic Review of the Literature.

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For Whom the Bell's Toll: Recurrent Facial Nerve Paralysis, A Retrospective Study and Systematic Review of the Literature.

TL;DR: In this paper, the etiology, clinical course, and management of recurrent peripheral facial nerve paralysis was examined in a single tertiary academic center and a systematic review of the literature.
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Evaluation of the facial nerve and internal auditory canal cross-sectional areas on three-dimensional fast imaging employing steady-state acquisition magnetic resonance imaging in Bell’s palsy

TL;DR: It is found that FN and IAC size differ on the affected sides of patients with Bell's palsy and these anatomical differences may contribute to the risk for this disease.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Facial nerve grading system

TL;DR: An easy method of measuring facial movement has been developed by one of us and is intended for use when a patient's facial nerve recovery is being assessed.
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Bell Palsy and Herpes Simplex Virus: Identification of Viral DNA in Endoneurial Fluid and Muscle

TL;DR: To amplify and identify the HSV, varicella-zoster virus, and Epstein-Barr virus genomes, five sets of virus-specific primers and internal oligonucleotide probes were synthesized for PCR and Southern blot analysis.
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Surgery for Bell's palsy.

TL;DR: To obtain satisfactory return of facial movements in all cases of Bell's palsy, surgical decompression should be performed within 24 hours when degeneration reaches 90% to 94% within one to 21 days after onset to keep the number of unnecessary operations under 16%.
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The Facial Nerve

TL;DR: Applied Basic Science and Clinical Fundamentals Clinical Evaluation of Patients with Facial Paralysis Management of patients with facial paralysis management of Hyperkinesis Surgery and the Facial Nerve Rehabilitation Techniques for Acute and Long-Standing Facialparalysis.
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