Abstract

Delayed facial nerve palsy, a condition characterized by spontaneous deterioration of facial nerve function in patients who had otherwise normal or near-normal facial function in the immediate postoperative period, has been reported in 15 to 29% of patients undergoing microsurgical resection of vestibular schwannomas. One putative mechanism for its occurrence suggests that edematous entrapment of the facial nerve in the meatal foramen (the narrowest segment of the internal auditory canal) may lead to nerve ischemia or necrosis and subsequent facial nerve dysfunction. To assess whether meatal decompression may help reduce the incidence of delayed facial nerve palsy during microsurgical resection of acoustic tumors, we compared 25 patients undergoing translabyrinthine removal of acoustic neuromas who received prophylactic decompression of the labyrinthine segment of the facial nerve (Group 1) with 40 patients who did not receive facial nerve decompression (Group 2). No patients in Group 1 had a delayed progressive facial paralysis with degeneration. In contrast, when Group 2 patients with larger, average-sized tumors were reviewed, eight patients (20%) developed delayed degeneration. These findings suggest that decompression of the labyrinthine segment may be of value in acoustic tumor surgery in reducing delayed facial nerve dysfunction. Further study is indicated in this important area.

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