Results 241 to 250 of about 84,070 (290)
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Facial reanimation after facial nerve injury
Neurosurgery, 1991Abstract Patients with facial paralysis are often seen in neurosurgical practice. Obtaining full facial symmetry and function after facial nerve damage presents the neurosurgeon with a difficult challenge. Various surgical techniques have been developed to deal with this problem.
R H, Rosenwasser +4 more
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Extratemporal facial nerve injury
Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians, 1976Isolated traumatic facial nerve injury, frequently seen in wartime combat, may also be encountered among civilians. The clinical picture occurring as a result of such injury may be confusing because partial, or incomplete, damage to the peripheral nerve may mimic impairment of the central facial motor mechanism.
G L, Sternbach, P, Rosen, H W, Meislin
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Experimentally Controlled Facial Nerve Injuries
Archives of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, 1966THE ETIOLOGY and treatment of Bell's palsy are among the unresolved problems in medicine today. It has been reported that 10% to 20% of patients either do not recover or recover incompletely; some suffer synkinesis or contractures. Therefore, it is of paramount importance to forecast, early in the course of the disease, the final outcome in each ...
J J, Rosenberg, B R, Alford
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Facial Nerve Injury in Hemifacial Spasm
Ophthalmic Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, 1990We studied evidence of facial nerve damage in patients with hemifacial spasm. Three types of evidence of nerve damage were analyzed: objectively measured weakness in eyelid protractor strength, clinically evident weakness of muscles innervated by the seventh nerve, and clinically evident aberrant seventh nerve regeneration.
B R, Frueh, R A, Preston, D C, Musch
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Intratemporal Facial Nerve Injuries
Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, 1982A summary of the results of operative intervention for intratemporal facial nerve injuries in 81 cases is given. Causes, preoperative assessment, and operative techniques are discussed. The necessity for a variation in surgical approaches is stressed, depending on location of injury and associated neurologic findings.
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2018
This chapter focuses on the clinical and surgical management of facial nerve palsy that occurs as a consequence of injury during resection of a vestibular schwannoma. If the facial nerve is damaged during cerebellopontine angle (CPA) tumor resection, a first attempt to repair it at the skull base should be made.
Mariano Socolovsky +2 more
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This chapter focuses on the clinical and surgical management of facial nerve palsy that occurs as a consequence of injury during resection of a vestibular schwannoma. If the facial nerve is damaged during cerebellopontine angle (CPA) tumor resection, a first attempt to repair it at the skull base should be made.
Mariano Socolovsky +2 more
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Iatrogenic facial nerve injury
International Journal of Oral Surgery, 1985A case of injury to the facial nerve as a complication to sagittal split osteotomy is reported.
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2017
Minimizing risk to the integrity of the facial nerve is a critical measure of surgical success in temporomandibular joint (TMJ) surgeries. The surgeon must have a keen understanding of the regional anatomy combined with a planned dissection to protect the facial nerve in their approach to the joint [1].
Hany Emam +2 more
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Minimizing risk to the integrity of the facial nerve is a critical measure of surgical success in temporomandibular joint (TMJ) surgeries. The surgeon must have a keen understanding of the regional anatomy combined with a planned dissection to protect the facial nerve in their approach to the joint [1].
Hany Emam +2 more
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Management of Traumatic Facial Nerve Injuries
Facial Plastic Surgery, 2010Management of facial nerve injuries requires knowledge and skills that should be in every facial plastic surgeon's armamentarium. This article will briefly review the anatomy of the facial nerve, discuss the assessment of facial nerve injury, and describe the management of facial nerve injury after soft tissue trauma.
Jewel D, Greywoode +3 more
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Facial Nerve Injury during External Dacryocystorhinostomy
Ophthalmology, 2009To describe weakness of the orbicularis oculi muscle after external dacryocystorhinostomy (DCR) and propose an anatomic explanation for the complication.Retrospective, observational study.Sixteen patients (13 female, 3 male) with a mean age of 60 years (median, 61 years; range, 34-85 years).A retrospective chart review was performed of consecutive ...
M Reza, Vagefi +6 more
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