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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 84 patients with idiopathic, clinically complete
Bell's palsy
the electrically induced blink reflexes with their two components (OOR I and II) were electromyographically recorded on both sides using skin electrodes. In 67 of these patients the evoked responses of the orbicularis oris muscle were also studied. The latencies and amplitudes were measured and related to the clinical outcome of the facial paralysis. The patients were divided into two groups, one with good recovery of the palsy (46 patients), the other with significant residual
paresis
and/or strong associated movements of the facial musculature (38 patients). In the group with good recovery the following results were obtained: 1. the OOR I remained elicitable or reappeated during the first 12 days after the onset of palsy; 2. the OOR II began to rise during the first 10 days of palsy; 3. the amplitude of the orbicularis oris response did not decrease to below 10%. In the group with poor recovery: 1. both components of the OOR were absent or diminished to below 4% for more than 12 days after the onset of palsy; 2. the latency difference of the OOR I exceeded 8 msec; 3. the amplitude of the orbicularis oris responses decreased to below 10%. Using these criteria it appears to be possible in about 85% of patients to make a prognosis between the 3rd to 5th and the 10th to 12th day after the onset of
Bell's palsy
.
...
PMID:[Orbicularis oculi reflexes and evoked response of orbicularis oris muscle in Bell's palsy. A prognostic study (author's transl)]. 5 96
The etiology, frequency and prognosis of recurrent
Bell's palsy
were studied in patients with peripheral
paresis
of n.facialis of various etiology. Fourteen (11.9%) of 117 patients with
Bell's palsy
had a recurrent
paresis
of n.facialis. Nine of these were of homolateral and five contralateral type. Seven recurrent facial paralyses in idiopathic
Bell's palsy
(i.e. 10.4% of the patients with idiopathic facial palsy), 3 facial palsies of viral origin (i.e. 8.8% of the patients with viral facial palsy), one in association with diabetes mellitus, one during pregnancy, one combined with positive rheumatic serological tests, and one in a case of Melkersson-Rosenthal syndrome were found. The frequency and heterogenity of etiology of recurrent facial palsies suggest a predisposing factor or immune mechanisms. In eight patients there was within 6 to 8 weeks a good, in two patients a moderate and in four patients a poor recovery of function. The greater reduction of the compound action potential of the m.orbicularis oris in recurrent homolateral facial palsy in relation to patients with single manifestation point out the greater denervation and therefore the poorer prognosis of recurrent palsies. A prophylactic decompression to prevent a third attack of recurrent facial
paresis
is considered.
...
PMID:Recurrent Bell's palsy. Etiology, frequency, prognosis. 7 1
Electrophysiological investigations were carried out on 20 healthy controls and 130 patients with peripheral facial nerve paralysis. The aetiology was as follows: idiopathic (
Bell's palsy
) in 60 cases, viral in 29, traumatic in 18, postoperative in 4, in connexion with chronic otitis media in 6, diabetes mellitus in 4, positive rheumatological tests in 3, disturbed lipid metabolism in 2, the Melkersson-Rosenthal syndrome in 1, as a complication of pregnancy in 2, and in association with a tumour in 1 case. The compound action potential (CAP) of the orbicularis oris muscle was determinedi n 370 occasions in a right/left comparision, the record of the muscle response was intergrated over the time of action (IAR) on 32 occasions and trison of 255 occasions. The normal values are given in the first place and their dependence of the age of the subject. Then, the prognostic sifnficance of the above-mentioned parameters is investigated in cases of peripheral facial nerve paralysis. It is apparent that the determination of the CAP in a right/left comparison is a valuable prognostic guide as early as the 4th day, insofar as a decrease in this parameter of under 50% can be interpreted as a favourable sign and satisfactory reversal of the paralysis can be expected within 6-8 weeks. By contrast, a decrease of over 70% in the CAP is a bad prognostic sign, indicative of presumably only a poor trend to reversal of the paralysis. An intermediate depression of the CAP in the range of 50-70% signifies an expected moderate recovery within 6-8 weeks ahe case of CAP determination at the time of maximum amplitude depression (as opposed to the 4th day), then a decrease of less than 70% is taken to be indicative of satisfactory functional recovery within 6-8 weeks; a decrease of 95-100% signifies a bad prognosis, whilst a decrease amounting to between 70 and 95% carries an uncertain prognosis. The maximum decrease in amplitude was registered on the 8th day on average; the range lay between the 4th and the 14th day. An exception to these figures was the delayed response of the CAP in the case of 6 patients, 5 of whom showed a maximum decrease during the 3rd week and the last patient as late as the 4th week following the onset of facial nerve
paresis
. Similar reliance can be placed on the prognostic value of the IAR. however, the decrease in the IAR is smaller than that of the CAP measured on the same potential in a right/left comparison, so that a decrease in the IAR of over 60% can already herald a poor recovery. Repeated determination of the latency in cases of facial nerve paralysis showed that the mean latency value for the entire group of patients was slightly prolonged at the end of the 1st week, but the latency values obtained in any one particular patient are of no prognostic significance. A comparison between CAP and latency values obtained with the opposite (i.e...
...
PMID:[Prognostic assessment in peripheral facial nerve paralysis with particular reference to electroneurography (author's transl)]. 18 19
In 111 patients with idiopathic peripheral facial paralysis (
Bell's palsy
) the prognosis was established during the first days of the disease, using sialometry and the stapedius reflex test in 102 patients. A poor prognosis was indicated in 36 patients. Treatment with adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) was commenced within 10 days (in the majority within 5 days) of the onset of the
paresis
in 31 of those patients with a poor prognosis. The recovery rate in the ACTH-treated group was superior compared with the untreated control group of patients with a poor prognosis. The difference is statistically significant. Those patients with a good prognosis were not treated but merely followed up. Some factors which could influence the result of the treatment are considered.
...
PMID:Bell's palsy-beneficial effect of treatment with adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) in patients with a poor prognosis. 21 28
Electrophysiologic investigations were carried out on 45 patients with
Bell's palsy
at periodic intervals after the onset of paralysis. It was found that there was a good correlation between prognosis in
Bell's palsy
and the amplitude of evoked motor response obtained after six or more days of clinical
paresis
. When the average amplitude of evoked motor response was within normal limits (i.e., 504 mu V or greater), complete recovery with no residual deficits took place two to six weeks after the onset of facial palsy. When the evoked motor response was absent in all three major branches of the facial nerve, indicating complete nerve degeneration, electromyographic signs of recovery were apparent by the third of fourth month after the onset of paralysis. In these cases, recovery was relatively slow and incomplete, with some degree of residual deficit and synkinesis. Maximal return of voluntary facial movement was established 8 to 12 months after the initial symptom. When the mean amplitude of evoked motor response was below the lower limit of normal (i.e., less than 504 mu V), electromyographic signs of recovery were noted within 1 to 3 months, depending on the amplitude values. The final outcome of this intermediate group was similar, but not identical, to that of the previous group. The prognosis of facial paralysis in
Bell's palsy
was thus found to be directly related to the mean amplitude of evoked motor response, regardless of the extent of clinical paralysis.
...
PMID:Electrophysiologic findings and prognosis in Bell's palsy. 75 68
The present study is based upon the results of repeated electrodiagnostic tests carried out in a series of 100 cases of
Bell's palsy
(Determination of Rheobase and Chronaxy). The first symptoms of denervation can be observed during the second week after the onset of the paralysis. This seems to be the critical period in which the ultimate consequences of the lesion are determined: partial or total recovery or complete irreversible denervation. In cases showing a rapid increase of chronaxy during the 2nd week, prognosis is rather poor because a difference of 240% between the affected and the normal side indicates a progressive denervation. Cases in which the difference of chronaxy values during the 2nd week is increased upto 240% (i.e. partial denervation) recover incompletely in 15% of the cases. Estimation of prognosis in
Bell's palsy
and timing of a facial nerve decompression must be based on reliable facts, such as the results of repeated electrodiagnostic tests (modified measurement of Rheobase and Chronaxy) carried out at least every secont but preferably every day during the first 3 weeks after the onset of the
paresis
.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic importance of electrophysiologic tests in Bell's palsy: report on a longterm follow-up study in 100 cases (author's transl)]. 97 88
Facial paresis as a sign or symptom is caused by a number of different conditions. Although being the most common type of facial
paresis
,
Bell's palsy
represents a diagnosis of exclusion characterized by an acute, unilateral peripheral facial palsy of unknown etiology. Clinical features and laboratory findings are considered with regard to their diagnostic as well as prognostic significance.
...
PMID:[Bell's palsy--a field of controversies. I. Etiology and pathogenesis--diagnostic delimitation--prognosis]. 144 43
Infection with the tick-borne Borrelia burgdorferi can lead to a variety of neurologic symptoms, the most frequent being a radicular pain syndrome due to meningitis. General symptoms such as asthenia or headache are also frequent, however, and serious neurologic complications such as dementia or spastic
paresis
may occur. At an early stage, Borrelia infections can be easily treated with antibiotics, which makes it important to recognize the symptoms and make the correct diagnosis. A common feature of borreliosis is facial palsy, and in the article is described the case of a 14 year-old boy with borreliosis and bilateral facial palsy. The frequency of facial palsy from borreliosis is probably high. The authors discuss the indications for performing lumber puncture in patients with apparent idiopathic facial palsy (
Bell's palsy
).
...
PMID:[Peripheral facial paresis as a symptom of Borrelia burgdorferi infection]. 155 45
Fifty patients with
Bell's palsy
and 30 patients with etiologically different symptomatic peripheral facial nerve palsy were studied by means of electrically evoked blink reflexes 1-23 days after onset of
paresis
. Their results were compared with a normal control group of 30 healthy subjects. In a significant number of patients (64% in
Bell's palsy
and 53% in symptomatic facial nerve palsy) a contralateral early blink reflex response (R1) could be elicited upon stimulation of the normal side as compared to 13% in the control group. It is suggested that this result may be explained by synaptic reorganization of the facial nucleus leading to functional unmasking of pre-existing crossed trigemino-facial reflex pathways during regeneration. This view is in line with previous experimental data in animals on the time course of structural changes in the facial nucleus after lesioning of the ipsilateral facial nerve.
...
PMID:Contralateral early blink reflex in patients with facial nerve palsy: indication for synaptic reorganization in the facial nucleus during regeneration. 163 97
Out of 121 patients examined with acute unilateral facial paralysis, 93 were determined to have idiopathic facial palsy (
Bell's palsy
). The examination included pure-tone and speech audiometry, stapedial reflex recordings, temporal bone radiography and auditory-evoked brain-stem response testing (ABR). If a retrocochlear lesion was suspected, computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging was performed. Patients with sensorineural hearing loss affecting all frequencies were compared to one group with hearing loss affecting only high frequencies and to another group with ABR findings suggesting a cochlear lesion. No association could be made between the etiology of these pathological results and the concurrent facial
paresis
. Most of them were probably caused by unrelated disorders of the auditory system. In cases with prolonged inter-peak latencies representing brain-stem responses, abnormal ABRs could be caused by the same pathology as the paralysis. This might well suggest the presence of a neuropathy in both the central auditory system and the facial tracts.
...
PMID:Auditory-evoked brain-stem responses and auditory disorders in patients with Bell's palsy. 174 52
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