Effiya,...Getting back to your original questions...
"Does facial paralysis as a result of AN surgery eventually heal? What are the treatments available now for facial paralysis?" RE: Does facial paralysis as a result of AN surgery eventually heal? Yes in many patients facial palsy does heal. Many of those people move forward and leave their AN stories behind so we do not always hear from them here. Usually the ones you hear from particularly under this “facial issues� section is because we have facial issues and support each other through this.
There are some people who have a 4cm removed and have no facial issues post surgery and then there are some of us 4cm who do … and then there is a whole variance in between. The bigger the tumor the higher risk of facial issue post surgery. Your surgeon is correct that tumors that have already been radiated (GK or FS) can be harder to remove as the make up the tumor was changed and in some cases these are more adherent to the facial nerve.
I was told that my face should recover in 6 months by my surgeon … and it was right on track … then the synkinesis set in. So he was right but unfortunately I came under that 15% who gets the synkinesis. I have also been told that Bells Palsy can take anywhere from 3 months to 3 years to resolve.
RE: What are the treatments available now for facial paralysis? Neuromuscular facial retraining therapyThis is for those who still have some facial nerve firing or movement. I met with a neuromuscular facial retraining therapist and she gave me some stretches to do that were beyond what was posted on the Bell Palsy website worksheet.
http://www.bellspalsy.ws/exercise.htm These were designed to deal with my personal overactive muscle issues and may not work for someone else whose synkinesis is affecting different muscles. This is why meeting with a certified, reputable and trained therapist- is key. Be sure to ask your surgeon what he/she offers patients for physiotherapy – “if� there are issues - post surgery. (Some surgeons do very little for their patients as far as physiotherapy and follow-up. You need to avoid those that have this negative and non-progressive attitude towards the effectiveness of physiotherapy)
I have been doing the stretches prescribed for me for 4 days and already I have a very significant movement in my nostril- that was not doing anything before meeting the therapist. She showed me how to loosen the muscles and get rid of the snarl that Linny has described above. I spend 2 hours a day now working on “my body�: exercise (power-walk), vestibular (palates ball and neck stretches) and the new facial exercises. I do believe that these are working but it is a slow and laborious process. I have to remain disciplined. We have not gone “the botox route yet� - but this is in the forecast for my overactive neck muscles.
(
Linny, please know I have been working very hard to connect this therapist with OHSU and we are currently looking at getting a presentation together for our local support group. The OHSU doctor is very interested in bringing this therapist out, as she is out-of-state, to his clinic to see patients on our area- so know there IS hope here)
This article is worth a read.
http://www.ophth.wisc.edu/about/fsSummer2004.html#botoxThe physical therapist I saw last week was actually trained by Jacqueline Diels and before that did vestibular therapy. She is well versed on Acoustic Neuroma Patients. Pretty down to earth and no snake oil business stuff. I liked her.
This talks about the botox option.
http://www.bellspalsy.ws/botox.htmTemporalis tendon transfer therapy For those who have had permanent facial nerve damage there is the “temporalis tendon transfer therapy�
http://www.hopkinsfacialplastics.com/gallery_facial_reanimation.phpHere is a Canadian News Story about this procedure
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20070718/facial_surgery_070718/20070718?hub=HealthPlus this one
http://www.news-medical.net/?id=27682I have a hero on this forum and these are her before and after photos (yes this
our Nancy who we all adore)
http://anausa.org/forum/index.php?topic=5544.msg52378#msg52378Many who have the permanent full palsy also need an eye weight. This is a day surgery. Most patients do well with the gold weight and now there is discussion about placing it further back than along the eye-lashes. Only a few people react to the gold- this is what makes Nancy so special- she is our “platinum model�. (Ie she was allergic to the gold one...
no seriously she IS
very special!)
There is also the facial nerve graft
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1908974Maybe someone here knows of more links and links to photos
specifically of “before and after�- from this procedure.
Know that it is NOT the majority of the Acoustic Neuroma Surgery patients that get Bell Palsy but is the
minority. Try to think optimistically. Nevertheless I do believe in the philosophy "
Prepare for the worst and hope for the best." You are doing well by posing these questions of us-all.
The one thing that I will impart is that at 4cm you do have a good chance of having dry eye issues post surgery (and this may not be permanent). The one advice I give people is to remember the “E� in ENT does NOT stand for “eye�. If you have
any eye ssues, either at the hospital and or after you get home,
insist on being referred to an
ophthalmologist. The temporary eye weight can be a good solution until the nerves settle down and regains function.
http://www.meddev-corp.com/1%20product/Eyelid%20Closure%20Products/External%20Weights-FAQ.htmThen after reasonable time and there are still issues you can always have the in-office "day surgery" for a permanent weight. Why have more surgeries unnecessarily?
If you come out of surgery with paralysis- don’t think that it is permanent unless your surgical team tells you so based on their probe reading or that they removed the nerve (higly unlikely but if this happens they do a nerve jump later). Only time and healing will indicate the final facial prognosis.
Effiya, I am sorry you have to go through AN treatment
again- but please know there is lots of support here for you- regardless of the outcome with your facial nerve. I am confident you will come to adore, admire and appreciate all the great people here on this forum. I know I sure have.
Tonight I will say a little prayer for you.
Keep moving forward…
HUGS
Daisy Head Mazy