[Post-traumatic facial paralysis without any fracture of the petrous bone].

Rev Laryngol Otol Rhinol (Bord)

CHU Pellegrin Tripode, Clinique ORL, Bordeaux, France.

Published: May 1992

Post-traumatic facial palsies are generally observed after a transverse, longitudinal or comminuted fracture of the pars petrosa. Occasionally, the fracture does not involve the Fallopian aqueduct and another mechanism must be sought. The authors present a case of facial palsy that occurred after a Le Fort's fracture of the base of the skull, not involving the Fallopian aqueduct on the CT scan. This was confirmed by surgical exploration. The authors recall the possibility of a facial palsy through the stretching of the nerve by the petrosal nerve.

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