• Journal of neurosurgery · Jan 2013

    Hemihypoglossal nerve transfer for acute facial paralysis.

    • Ayato Hayashi, Masanobu Nishida, Hisakazu Seno, Masahiro Inoue, Hiroshi Iwata, Tomohiro Shirasawa, Hajime Arai, Ryoji Kayamori, Yuzo Komuro, and Akira Yanai.
    • Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Juntendo University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan. ayhayasi@juntendo.ac.jp
    • J. Neurosurg.. 2013 Jan 1;118(1):160-6.

    ObjectThe authors have developed a technique for the treatment of facial paralysis that utilizes anastomosis of the split hypoglossal and facial nerve. Here, they document improvements in the procedure and experimental evidence supporting the approach.MethodsThey analyzed outcomes in 36 patients who underwent the procedure, all of whom had suffered from facial paralysis following the removal of large vestibular schwannomas. The average period of paralysis was 6.2 months. The authors used 5 different variations of a procedure for selecting the split nerve, including evaluation of the split nerve using recordings of evoked potentials in the tongue.ResultsSuccessful facial reanimation was achieved in 16 of 17 patients using the cephalad side of the split hypoglossal nerve and in 15 of 15 patients using the caudal side. The single unsuccessful case using the cephalad side of the split nerve resulted from severe infection of the cheek. Procedures using the ansa cervicalis branch yielded poor success rates (2 of 4 cases). Some tongue atrophy was observed in all variants of the procedure, with 17 cases of minimal atrophy and 14 cases of moderate atrophy. No procedure led to severe atrophy causing functional deficits of the tongue.ConclusionsThe split hypoglossal-facial nerve anastomosis procedure consistently leads to good facial reanimation, and the use of either half of the split hypoglossal nerve results in facial reanimation and moderate tongue atrophy.

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