J Korean Pain Soc.  1992 Nov;5(2):263-268.

Ramsay Hunt Syndrome: Case report on two cases

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Anesthesiology, Fatima Hospital, Taegu, Korea.

Abstract

Involvement of the facial nerve (herpes zoster oticus, Ramsay Hunt Syndrome) is a rather common clinical syndrome. It begins with unilateral ear pain, followed shortly by a peripheral facial palsy. Paresis or paralysis may affect the muscles of facial expression, which also close the eyelids. The levator palpebrae which is innervated by the 5th cranial nerve is spared, so the eye may remain open. The rash is usually confined to the tympanic membrane and the external auditory canal. It may spread to involve the outer surface of the lobe of the ear, anterior pillar or the fauces and mastoid. There also may be a loss of taste in the anterior two thirds of tongue. At time, the auditory nerve involvement produces tinnitus, deafness and vertigo. The 5th, 8th and 10th nerves and even the upper cervical spinal nerve can be involved pre sumedly on the base of spread of the infective process along anastomotic connections between the facial nerve. The facial paralysis is identical to that of Bells palsy. Frequently the recovery of facial nerve function is incomplete, leaving the patient with some residual facial weak ness. We experienced 2 cases of Ramsay Hunt Syndrome. The first patients, 55 year old male, visited our pain clinic on the day when his left facial nerve start to paralyze. We injected 6 ml of 0.25% bupivacaine into his left stellate ganglion 15 times. TENS was also applicated simultaneously. His facial paralysis was recovered completely 3 weeks after treatment without any complications. Another one, 53 year old male, visited us 7 weeks after onset of facial paralysis. He has been treated conventional oriental method (acupuncture, massage, warm application, etc). But the degree of his left facial paralysis didnt improve at all He has been treating with SGB 50 times and TENS for 2 months. Temporal and zygomatic branch of his left facial nerve recovered nearly completly but buccal and mandibular branch did not recover completely. We are willing to insist on the early treatment is the best choice in managing of Ramsay Hunt Syndrome.

Keyword

Facial nerve palsy; Ramsay Hunt syndrome

MeSH Terms

Bell Palsy
Bupivacaine
Cochlear Nerve
Deafness
Ear
Ear Canal
Exanthema
Eyelids
Facial Expression
Facial Nerve
Facial Paralysis
Herpes Zoster
Herpes Zoster Oticus*
Humans
Male
Massage
Mastoid
Middle Aged
Muscles
Olfactory Nerve
Pain Clinics
Paralysis
Paresis
Spinal Nerves
Stellate Ganglion
Tinnitus
Tongue
Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation
Tympanic Membrane
Vertigo
Bupivacaine
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