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Journal of neurosurgery · Jul 2024
Salvaging the transected hypoglossal nerve using descendens hypoglossi in patients undergoing hypoglossal-facial nerve anastomosis for facial palsy: a randomized clinical trial.
- Yinda Tang, Zheng Chen, Jin Zhu, Hua Zhao, Tingting Ying, Baimiao Wang, Wanchun Zhu, Haopeng Wang, Xiaomin Cai, Yiman Shen, Ping Zhou, Bowen Chang, Wenzheng Xia, Xiangyu Wei, Xueyi Wang, Xin Zhang, Jun Zhong, Xinjun Wang, Xudong Fu, Dengbin Wang, Ming Liu, Weituo Zhang, and Shiting Li.
- Departments of1Neurosurgery and.
- J. Neurosurg. 2024 Jul 26: 191-9.
ObjectiveHypoglossal-facial nerve anastomosis (HFA) is the most commonly used surgical treatment for severe facial palsy that does not respond to conservative treatments. A major complication of HFA is the loss of tongue function. The authors aimed to evaluate whether anastomosing the transected hypoglossal nerve using the ramus descendens hypoglossi could prevent tongue deviation and dysfunction in patients undergoing HFA.MethodsIn this randomized trial, adult patients with severe peripheral facial palsy (House-Brackmann grade V or VI) who did not respond to at least 6 months of conservative treatment were randomized at a 1:1 ratio to undergo either HFA alone (control group) or HFA plus anastomosis between the hypoglossal nerve and descendens hypoglossi (intervention group). The primary endpoint was tongue deviation angle at 12 months. Key secondary endpoints included tongue disability (chewing difficulty, swallowing defect, and articulation defect), tongue disability index (TDI; range 1-4, with a higher score indicating more severe disability), and facial nerve function.ResultsTwenty patients were enrolled (10 in each group). At 12 months, the tongue deviation angle was significantly lower in the intervention group than in the control group (7.8° ± 5.1° vs 23.6° ± 9.6°, p < 0.001). Although not statistically significant, the intervention group had lower rates of chewing difficulty (1/10 vs 3/10, p = 0.58), swallowing defect (1/10 vs 5/10, p = 0.14), and articulation defect (2/10 vs 6/10, p = 0.17). TDI was significantly lower in the intervention group (1.5 ± 0.6 vs 2.5 ± 0.3, p < 0.001). The percentage of the patients achieving House-Brackmann grade II or III was 80% in each group.ConclusionsAnastomosis of the descendens hypoglossi to the transected hypoglossal nerve attenuated tongue deviation in patients undergoing HFA for facial palsy, without compromising facial nerve function. Clinical trial registration no: ChiCTR2000034372 (Chinese Clinical Trials Registry).
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