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Surgical management and the prognosis of iatrogenic facial nerve injury in middle ear surgery: a 20-year experience.

Authors :
Sun, Jianbin
Wang, Ruoya
Chen, Xingrui
Wang, Jianze
Liu, Da
Sai, Na
Zhu, Yuhua
Liu, Jun
Shen, Weidong
Dai, Pu
Yang, Shiming
Han, Dongyi
Han, Weiju
Source :
Head & Face Medicine. 7/25/2023, Vol. 19 Issue 1, p1-14. 14p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Iatrogenic facial nerve injury is one of the severest complications of middle ear surgery, this study aims to evaluate surgical management and prognosis in the era of improved surgical instruments. Methods: Patients suffered from facial nerve paralysis after middle ear surgery between January 2000 and December 2019 were retrospectively collected. Demographic characters, primary disease and surgery, details of revision surgery were analyzed. Results: Forty-five patients were collected, of whom 8 were injured at our center and 37 were transferred. For 8 patients injured at our center, seven (87.5%) ranked House-Brackmann (H-B) grade V and one (12.5%) ranked H-B VI before revision surgery; postoperatively, two (25.0%) patients recovered to H-B grade I, four (50.0%) recovered to H-B II, and the other two (25.0%) recovered to H-B III. For 37 patients transferred, thirteen (35.1%) ranked H-B grade V and 24 (64.9%) ranked H-B VI preoperatively, final postoperative grade ranked from H-B grade I to grade V, with H-B I 6 (16.2%) cases, H-B II 6 (16.2%) cases, H-B III 18 (48.6%) cases, H-B IV 5 (13.5%) cases and H-B V 2 (5.4%) cases. The most vulnerable site was tympanic segment (5, 62.5% and 27, 73.0% respectively). Twenty-one (46.7%) patients suffered from mild injury and 24 (53.3%) suffered from partial or complete nerve transection. For surgical management, twenty-one (46.7%) patients received decompression, nineteen (42.2%) received graft and 5 (11.1%) received anastomosis. Those decompressed within 2 months after paralysis had higher possibility of H-B grade I or II recovery (P = 0.026), those received graft within 6 months were more likely to get H-B grade III recovery (P = 0.041), and for patients underwent anastomosis within 6 months, all recovered to H-B grade III. Conclusions: Tympanic segment is the vulnerable site. If facial nerve paralysis happens, high-resolution computed tomography could help identify the injured site. Timely treatment is important, decompression within 2 months after paralysis, graft and anastomosis within 6 months lead to better recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1746160X
Volume :
19
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Head & Face Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
166736666
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13005-023-00377-y