• Stroke · Jul 2000

    Case Reports

    Facial palsy in cerebral venous thrombosis : transcranial stimulation and pathophysiological considerations.

    • J Straub, M R Magistris, J Delavelle, and T Landis.
    • Departments of Neurology, University Hospital of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland. judith.straub@hcuge.ch
    • Stroke. 2000 Jul 1;31(7):1766-9.

    BackgroundCranial nerve palsy in cerebral sinovenous thrombosis (CVT) is rare, its pathophysiology remains unclear, and data from electrophysiological examinations in such patients are missing.Case DescriptionWe report the case of a 17-year-old woman with familial protein S deficiency who was admitted with extensive multiple CVT. Two weeks after onset of symptoms, she developed isolated right peripheral facial palsy, and MR venography showed segmental occlusion of the ipsilateral transverse sinus. Complete recovery of facial palsy occurred concomitant with recanalization of the transverse sinus. Facial neurography, including transcranial magnetic stimulation of the facial nerve and related motor cortex, ruled out a coincidental idiopathic palsy and revealed conduction block proximal to the facial canal.ConclusionsFacial palsy in our patient was caused by transient neurapraxia in the intracranial segment of the nerve. We suggest that elevated venous transmural pressure in the nerve's satellite vein, which belongs to the affected drainage territory of the transverse sinus, might have caused venous blood-brain barrier dysfunction in the intrinsic vascular system of the nerve, with leakage of fluids and ions into the endoneurial space and thus an increase in interstitial resistance.

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