AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compares the effectiveness of three nerve transfer techniques (hemihypoglossal-to-facial with grafts, hemihypoglossal-to-facial without grafts, and masseteric-to-facial nerve transfers) in treating facial nerve palsies when the facial nerve is inaccessible.
  • A total of 77 patients were analyzed, revealing that surgeries without grafts (HFD) and masseteric transfers (MF) had better recovery outcomes compared to those with grafts (HFG), although HFD was statistically superior.
  • Delaying surgery beyond two years after the injury negatively impacted outcomes, highlighting the importance of technique and timing in surgical intervention for facial reinnervation.

Article Abstract

Background: The hypoglossal (with or without grafts) and masseter nerves are frequently used as axon donors for facial reinnervation when no proximal stump of the facial nerve is available. We report our experience treating facial nerve palsies via hemihypoglossal-to-facial nerve transfers either with (HFG) or without grafts (HFD), comparing these outcomes against those of masseteric-to-facial nerve transfers (MF).

Method: A total of 77 patients were analyzed retrospectively, including 51 HFD, 11 HFG, and 15 MF nerve transfer patients. Both the House-Brackmann (HB) scale and our own, newly-designed scale to rate facial reanimation post nerve transfer (quantifying symmetry at rest and when smiling, eye occlusion, and eye and mouth synkinesis when speaking) were used to enumerate the extent of recovery.

Results: With both the HB and our own facial reanimation scale, the HFD and MF procedures yielded better outcome scores than HFG, though only the HGD was statistically superior. HGD produced slightly better scores than MF for everything but eye synkinesis, but these differences were generally not statistically significant. Delaying surgery beyond 2 years since injury was associated with appreciably worse outcomes when measured with our own but not the HB scale. The only predictors of outcome were the surgical technique employed and the duration of time between the initial injury and surgery.

Conclusions: HFD appears to produce the most satisfactory facial reanimation results, with MF providing lesser but still satisfactory outcomes. Using interposed grafts while performing hemihypoglossal-to-facial nerve transfers should likely be avoided, whenever possible.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00701-016-2767-7DOI Listing

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