¸ñÀû: Facial synkinesis can result in facial tightness, smile dysfunction, and
eyelid aperture narrowing due to overactive and uncoordinated muscle
activity. We hypothesized that the outcome of a selective neurectomy
could rely on the patient's chief complaints. ¹æ¹ý:We retrospectively reviewed 122 patients who underwent selective
neurectomy at our hospital. Preoperatively, the patients were asked nine
questionnaires to identify their two major chief complaints (treatment
priorities). Postoperatively, facial tightness, limited mouth movement,
and eyelid aperture narrowing were measured. °á°ú:The most common chief complaints in our series were facial tightness
(n=38), eyelid narrowing (n=32), and limited mouth movement (n=28);
the second most common chief complaints (second priority) were limited
mouth movement (n=47), facial tightness (n=21), and eyelid narrowing
(n=20). The mean score for facial tightness significantly improved
from 4.3 to 1.1 in the first priority group. Among the 28 patients
whose corners of the mouth constituted the top priority of surgical
correction, the vertical inclination on the affected side
significantly improved from 74.1 ¡¾ 7.6¡Æ to 55.5 ¡¾ 6.0¡Æ, and the
horizontal angles were changed from 4.2 ¡¾ 2.7¡Æ to 2.0 ¡¾ 1.3¡Æ after
selective neurectomy without statistically significant. Among the 32
patients for whom eyelid narrowing constituted the top priority, the
mean eyelid narrowing score improved from 4.5 ¡¾ 1.1 to 1.5 ¡¾ 1.2. °á·Ð:Selective neurectomy can provide a significantly satisfactory outcome
regarding facial tightness and eyelid aperture narrowing. The vertical
inclination of the mouth corner can be significantly improved, while the
improvement of horizontal angles can be suboptimal. |