Search results for "Facial Nerve Diseases"

showing 5 items of 5 documents

Seventh nerve palsies may be the only clinical sign of small pontine infarctions in diabetic and hypertensive patients

2002

Backgroud: Small brainstem infarctions are increasingly recognized as a cause of isolated ocular motor and vestibular nerve palsies in diabetic and/or hypertensive patients. This raises the question whether there are also isolated 7th nerve palsies due to pontine infarctions in patients with such risk factors for the development of cerebrovascular diseases. Methods: Over an 11-year-period, we retrospectively identified 10 diabetic and/or hypertensive patients with isolated 7th nerve palsies and electrophysiological abnormalities indicating pontine dysfunction. All patients had examinations of masseter and blink reflexes, brainstem auditory evoked potentials, direct current electro-oculograp…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyBrain Stem InfarctionsNeurologyFunctional LateralityDiabetes ComplicationsOcular Motility DisordersPonsInternal medicineNeural PathwaysDiabetes MellitusVestibulocochlear Nerve DiseasesmedicineHumansCranial nerve diseaseStrokeAgedRetrospective StudiesParesisbusiness.industryMiddle AgedVestibular nervemedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingFacial nerveFacial paralysisSurgeryFacial NerveNeurologyBasilar ArteryHypertensionCardiologyFemaleDisease SusceptibilityNeurology (clinical)Facial Nerve Diseasesmedicine.symptombusinessJaw jerk reflexJournal of Neurology
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A painful tic convulsif due to double neurovascular impingement

2011

Here we present the case of a 50-year-old man suffering from "painful tic convulsif", on the left side of the face, i.e., left trigeminal neuralgia associated with ipsilateral hemifacial spasm. An angio-MRI scan showed a neurovascular confliction of left superior cerebellar artery with the ipsilateral V cranial nerve and of the left inferior cerebellar artery with the ipsilateral VII cranial nerve. Neurophysiological evaluation through esteroceptive blink reflex showed the involvement of left facial nerve. An initial carbamazepine treatment (800 mg/daily) was completely ineffective, so the patient was shifted to lamotrigine 50 b.i.d. that was able to reduce attacks from 4 to 6 times per day…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyClinical NeurologyFacial Nerve DiseasesPainful tic convulsifSettore BIO/09 - FisiologiaDouble vascular impingementTrigeminal neuralgiamedicine.arteryVertebrobasilar InsufficiencymedicineBasilar arteryHumansCorneal reflexVertebrobasilar insufficiencybusiness.industryBrief ReportGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedTrigeminal NeuralgiaNeurovascular bundlemedicine.diseaseSurgeryPainful tic convulsif; Trigeminal neuralgia; hemifacial spasm; double vascular impingementTreatment OutcomeAnesthesiology and Pain Medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureHemifacial spasmBasilar ArteryAnesthesiaSettore MED/26 - NeurologiaNeurology (clinical)Facial Nerve DiseasesCerebellar arterybusinessHemifacial spasmThe Journal of Headache and Pain
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Cystic vestibular schwannoma: classification, management, and facial nerve outcomes.

2009

OBJECTIVE: Review of postoperative morbidity and facial nerve outcomes of cystic vestibular schwannoma (CVS) patients compared with solid vestibular schwannoma (SVS) patients and a proposal for a new CVS classification system. STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective review. SETTING: Tertiary care facility. PATIENTS: Ninety-six patients with surgically treated CVS (1998-2008). Outcomes were assessed in a subpopulation of 57 patients with greater than or equal to 1-year follow-up compared with 57 SVS patients. INTERVENTION: Fifty-six CVS patients underwent the enlarged translabyrinthine approach with transapical extension (Type I), and 1 patient underwent a transcochlear/transzygomatic approach. MAIN OUT…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyCystic vestibular schwannomaSchwannomaVestibular schwannomaPostoperative ComplicationsmedicineHumansCystCranial Nerve NeoplasmsFacial nerve outcomesAgedRetrospective StudiesAged 80 and overTranslabyrinthine approachbusiness.industryCystsAcoustic neuromaRetrospective cohort studyNeuroma AcousticMiddle AgedNeurovascular bundlemedicine.diseaseNeuromaFacial nerveMagnetic Resonance ImagingSensory SystemsSurgeryDissectionTreatment OutcomeOtorhinolaryngologyTranslabyrinthine approachFemaleNeurology (clinical)Facial Nerve DiseasesbusinessOtologic Surgical ProceduresFollow-Up StudiesOtologyneurotology : official publication of the American Otological Society, American Neurotology Society [and] European Academy of Otology and Neurotology
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Intermediate nerve schwannoma: A rare tumour

2011

The intermediate nerve (IN), also called the nerve of Wrisberg, is a relatively small nerve with a variable anatomical course. Currently, this nerve is not addressed well in the pertinent literature. Pre-operative diagnosis of IN tumours is clinically challenging due to the lack of related symptoms. Symptoms are typically caused by the functional deterioration of neighbouring anatomical structures. In this report, we describe a patient with a schwannoma that arose at the porus acusticus of the internal auditory canal; during surgery, this proved to originate from the IN. We discuss our findings in the context of previously reported cases of IN schwannomas and analyse the vague characteristi…

AdultMaleSchwannomaMagnetic Resonance ImagingNerve of WrisbergDiagnosis DifferentialFacial NerveVestibular schwannomaIntermediate nerveVertigoHumansCranial Nerve NeoplasmsBenign Paroxysmal Positional VertigoFacial Nerve DiseasesNeurilemmoma
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Labial dystonia after facial and trigeminal neuropathy controlled with a maxillary splint.

2007

A 27-year-old woman with bruxism suffered a spider bite (Loxosceles rufescens) on the left cheek that caused severe local cellulitis, facial palsy, and painful hyperesthesia over the two lower trigeminal nerve divisions. Facial but not trigeminal neuropathy improved, and she developed a labial dystonia that only corrected while pressing the right medial incisor. A specially designed maxillary splint that continuously pressed it suppressed both dystonia and related spontaneous firing of motor unit potentials in electromyography. Overstimulation of the contralateral trigeminal territory possibly compensated for the altered left trigeminal nerve input, balanced proprioceptive influences at the…

AdultLabial FrenumPalatal Expansion Techniquemedicine.medical_treatmentElectromyographyNeurological disordermedicineMaxillaHumansTrigeminal nerveDystoniaPalsyProprioceptionmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryHyperesthesiaAnatomymedicine.diseasestomatognathic diseasesDystoniaNeurologyTrigeminal Nerve DiseasesFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomFacial Nerve DiseasesSplint (medicine)businessMovement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society
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