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Frontiers In Neurology

Publication date: 2022-11-09
Volume: 13
Publisher: Frontiers Media

Author:

Guntinas-Lichius, Orlando
Prengel, Jonas ; Cohen, Oded ; Mäkitie, Antti A ; Vander Poorten, Vincent ; Ronen, Ohad ; Shaha, Ashok ; Ferlito, Alfio

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Clinical Neurology, Neurosciences, Neurosciences & Neurology, Bell's palsy, electromyography, aberrant regeneration, botulinum toxin, surgery, EMG feedback training, electrostimulation, facial synkinesis, BOTULINUM TOXIN, MIME THERAPY, BIOFEEDBACK REHABILITATION, PARALYSIS SYNKINESIS, NERVE PARESIS, BELLS-PALSY, SEQUELAE, RECONSTRUCTION, BUCCINATOR, VALIDATION, 1103 Clinical Sciences, 1109 Neurosciences, 1701 Psychology, 3202 Clinical sciences, 3209 Neurosciences, 5202 Biological psychology

Abstract:

INTRODUCTION: Post-paralytic facial synkinesis after facial nerve injury produces functional disabilities and mimetic deficits, but also cosmetic and non-motor psychosocial impairments for the patients. These patients typically have a high and continuous high motivation for rehabilitation. The aim is to inform the affected patients and their therapeutic professionals (otorhinolaryngologist - head and neck surgeons; oral-maxillofacial surgeons, plastic and reconstructive surgeons, neurosurgeons, neurologists, and mime therapists be it speech and language therapy- or physiotherapy-based) and to provide practical recommendations for diagnostics and a stepwise systematic treatment approach of facial synkinesis. METHODS: In the first phase, a systematic literature search on the topic in PubMed and ScienceDirect starting in 2008 resulted in 132 articles. These were the basis for the review and a comprehensive series of consensus statements on the most important diagnostic tests and treatment options. In the second phase, one consensus article circulated among the membership of the International Head and Neck Scientific Group until a final agreement was reached for all recommendations. RESULTS: Diagnostics should include a standardized assessment of the degree of synkinesis using validated clinician-graded instruments and synkinesis-specific patient-reported outcome measures. Treatments for facial synkinesis include facial training mainly based on facial biofeedback retraining, chemodenervation with botulinum toxin, selective neurectomy, myectomy, and any combination treatment of these options. CONCLUSION: A basic understanding of the pathomechanisms of synkinesis is essential to understand the treatment strategies. A standardized assessment of the synkinetic symptoms and the individual synkinesis pattern is needed. The first-line treatment is facial training, followed by botulinum toxin. Surgery is reserved for individual cases with unsatisfactory first-line treatment.