Abstract

BackgroundCross-facial nerve graft is considered the treatment of choice for facial reanimation in patients with unilateral facial palsy caused by central facial nerve damage. In most cases, a traditional parotidectomy skin incision is used to locate the buccal and zygomatic branches of the facial nerve.MethodsIn this study, cross-facial nerve graft with the sural nerve was planned for three patients with facial palsy through an intraoral approach.ResultsAn incision was made on the buccal cheek mucosa, and the dissection was performed to locate the buccal branch of the facial nerve. The parotid papillae and parotid duct were used as anatomic landmarks to locate the buccal branch.ConclusionsThe intraoral approach is more advantageous than the conventional extraoral approach because of clear anatomic marker (parotid papilla), invisible postoperative scar, reduced tissue damage from dissection, and reduced operating time.

Highlights

  • Cross-facial nerve graft is considered the treatment of choice for facial reanimation in patients with unilateral facial palsy caused by central facial nerve damage

  • Cross-facial nerve graft is considered the treatment of choice for facial reanimation in patients with unilateral facial palsy caused by damage to the proximal stump of the facial nerve

  • We estimated that the parotid duct maintained a parallel course with the buccal branch of the facial nerve to the cross point, after which it curved around the masseter muscle to enter the oral cavity [1]

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Summary

Introduction

Cross-facial nerve graft is considered the treatment of choice for facial reanimation in patients with unilateral facial palsy caused by central facial nerve damage. Cross-facial nerve graft is considered the treatment of choice for facial reanimation in patients with unilateral facial palsy caused by damage to the proximal stump of the facial nerve. There are no clear anatomic markers for locating the nerve branches in the anterior approach, Methods The first patient is a 52-year-old female, first noticed with a right facial palsy 2.5 years ago. She was diagnosed with pontomedullary glioma and received radiation treatment on the brain stem 1.5 years ago. Per-oral cross-facial sural nerve graft for facial reanimation was planned

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