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Journal Article
Masseter-to-Facial Nerve Transfer for Reanimation of a Patient With Long-Term Facial Paralysis.
Journal of Craniofacial Surgery 2019 January
Facial paralysis is a condition caused by a wide variety of etiologies, including neurologic, congenital, infectious, neoplastic, systemic, and iatrogenic causes. A patient suffering from long-term facial paralysis, with minimal innervation detected through electroneurography, who was successfully reanimated by performing a masseter-to-facial nerve transfer, was presented in this study. Facial paralysis had been caused after resection of an acquired middle ear cholesteatoma more than 5 years before.
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