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Concurrent Bell’s Palsy and Facial Pain Improving with Multimodal Chiropractic Therapy: A Case Report and Literature Review
Patient: Female, 52-year-old Final Diagnosis: Bell’s palsy • trigeminal neuropathy Symptoms: Facial pain • facial paresis • neck pain Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Cervical traction • exercises • soft tissue manipulation • spinal manipulation Specialty: Neurology • Rehabilitation • Traditional M...
Autores principales: | , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
International Scientific Literature, Inc.
2022
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9501759/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36117309 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/AJCR.937511 |
Sumario: | Patient: Female, 52-year-old Final Diagnosis: Bell’s palsy • trigeminal neuropathy Symptoms: Facial pain • facial paresis • neck pain Medication: — Clinical Procedure: Cervical traction • exercises • soft tissue manipulation • spinal manipulation Specialty: Neurology • Rehabilitation • Traditional Medicine OBJECTIVE: Rare coexistence of disease or pathology BACKGROUND: Bell’s palsy, also called facial nerve palsy, occasionally co-occurs with trigeminal neuropathy, which presents as additional facial sensory symptoms and/or neck pain. Bell’s palsy has a proposed viral etiology, in particular when occurring after dental manipulation. CASE REPORT: A 52-year-old Asian woman presented to a chiropractor with a 3-year history of constant neck pain and left-sided maxillary, eyebrow, and temporomandibular facial pain, paresis, and paresthesia, which began after using a toothpick, causing possible gum trauma. She had previously been treated with antiviral medication and prednisone, Chinese herbal medicine, and acupuncture, but her recovery plateaued at 60% after 1 year. The chiropractor ordered cervical spine magnetic resonance imaging, which demonstrated cervical spondylosis, with no evidence of myelopathy or major pathology. Treatment involved cervical and thoracic spinal manipulation, cervical traction, soft-tissue therapy, and neck exercises. The patient responded positively. At 1-month follow-up, face and neck pain and facial paresis were resolved aside from residual eyelid synkinesis. A literature review identified 12 additional cases in which chiropractic spinal manipulation with multimodal therapies was reported to improve Bell’s palsy. Including the current case, 85% of these patients also had pain in the face or neck. CONCLUSIONS: This case illustrates improvement of Bell’s palsy and concurrent trigeminal neuropathy with multimodal chiropractic care including spinal manipulation. Limited evidence from other similar cases suggests a role of the trigeminal pathway in these positive treatment responses of Bell’s palsy with concurrent face/neck pain. These findings should be explored with research designs accounting for the natural history of Bell’s palsy. |
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