Facial Nerve Paralysis or Facial Palsy - โรคปลายประสาทคู่ที่ 7 อักเสบหรืออัมพาตใบหน้า

Authors

  • Anchalee Choombuathong

Abstract

Bell’s palsy is a form of facial paralysis resulting from a dysfunction of facial nerve that results
in the inability to control facial muscles on the affected side. Symptoms of Bell’s palsy range in
severity from mild weakness to total paralysis on ipsilateral face of the lesion. Other symptoms may
include drooping of the eyelid and corner of the mouth, impairment of taste, and excessive tearing in
one eye. The definite etiology of the disorder has not been well understood. However, reactivation
of the herpes simplex virus infection, latented in the geniculate ganglion of the facial nerve, is a
widely accepted pathophysiological mechanism. Some studies have shown that corticosteroid such
as prednisone is used to reduce inflammation and swelling. Other drugs such as antivirus is used to
fight viral herpes infections. However, the current practice of treating Bell’s palsy with antivirus
treatment plus corticosteroid may lead to slightly higher recovery rates compared to treating with
corticosteroid alone. The prognosis of Bell’s palsy is related to the severity of the lesion. A simple
rule is that clinically incomplete lesions tend to recover. Typically, the symptoms will recover within
21 days after initial onset. Exceptions are made with some clinical factors such as severity of facial
weakness, delayed oral prednisolone treatment. Though up to 85 percent of the cases have favorable
outcome and recover completely within 3 to 6 months after treatment.
Key words: Bell’s palsy, herpes simplex virus, paralysis, corticosteriod

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Published

2017-12-06

How to Cite

Choombuathong, A. (2017). Facial Nerve Paralysis or Facial Palsy - โรคปลายประสาทคู่ที่ 7 อักเสบหรืออัมพาตใบหน้า. Journal of Health Science of Thailand, 22(3), 547–553. Retrieved from https://thaidj.org/index.php/JHS/article/view/871

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