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Updated: Apr 4 2020

Bell Palsy

  • Snapshot
    • A 22-year-old man presents to his physician with facial drooping. He reports these symptoms began approximately 1 day prior to presentation. He denies any trauma to the face and past medical history is noncontributory. On physical examination, there is facial drooping of the right side of the face. The right nasolabial fold is absent and he is unable to close his right eye or raise the right side of his forehead. The rest of the neurologic exam is normal.
  • Introduction
    • Clinical definition
      • a neurologic defict secondary to weakness of the facial nerve
    • Epidemiology
      • incidence
        • 11-40 per 100,000 population
      • demographic
        • 15-45 years of age
    • Etiology
      • idiopathic
      • herpes simplex virus
      • varicella-zoster virus
      • lyme disease
      • sarcoidosis
      • malignancy
      • diabetes mellitus
    • Pathogenesis
      • facial nerve palsy may result from inflammatory or infectious insults to the facial nerve
    • Prognosis
      • most patients recover
  • Anatomy
    • The facial nerve is a mixed nerve that arises from the pontomedullary junction and contains
      • motor fiber input to the
        • facial muscles
      • parasympathetic fibers to the
        • lacrimal glands
        • submandibular glands
        • sublingual salivary glands
      • afferent fibers from the
        • taste receptors of the anterior two-thirds of the tongue
        • external auditory canal and pinna
  • Presentation
    • Symptoms and physical exam
      • unilateral facial weakness
        • eye brow sagging
        • inability to close the eye
        • absence of the nasolabial fold
        • corner of the mouth droops
      • decreased tearing
      • hyperacusis
      • loss of taste sensation of the anterior two-thirds of the tongue
    • Peripheral (lower motor neuron) vs central (upper motor neuron) lesion
      • a lower motor neuron lesion
        • involves the forehead
      • a upper motor neuron lesion
        • spares the forehead
  • Studies
    • Diagnostic criteria
      • a clinical diagnosis
  • Differential
    • Stroke
    • Multiple sclerosis
    • Myasthenia gravis
    • Guillain-Barre syndrome
  • Treatment
    • Medical
      • glucocorticoids
        • indication
          • oral glucocorticoids is the mainstay of pharmacologic treatment in patients with acute idiopathic Bell's palsy
  • Complications
    • Ocular manifestations
      • corneal drying and abrasion
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