1, pouting is mainly accomplished by contraction of orbicularis oris muscle. When doing lip kissing training, you should shrink your lips, make your lips move forward and make your lips work hard. After the recovery of orbicularis oris muscle, the symptoms of patients with swollen cheeks, missing teeth or drooling after meals disappeared. When training lips, the motor functions of levator labialis, quadratus labialis and mental muscles were also trained.
2. Shrugging training can promote the recovery of motor function of descending and lifting nose muscles. There are a few patients who can't shrug their noses, so they should pay attention to the direction of their noses during training.
3. Eyebrow lifting training The completion of eyebrow lifting mainly depends on the movement of forehead and abdomen of occipital frontalis muscle. Apraxia, mild to moderate pathological facial paralysis, frontotemporal muscle motor function is the easiest to recover. It can guide patients to lift eyebrows on the healthy side and the affected side, which is helpful to the recovery of eyebrow lifting motor function.
4. Bumping chin training is helpful to the recovery of the motor function of orbicularis oris and buccal muscles. When the gills leak, hold the orbicularis oris muscle of the affected side up and down with your hands and perform gilldrum training. Patients can exercise buccal drum, indicating that the motor function of orbicularis oris muscle and buccal muscle can return to normal, and the symptoms such as water leakage, drooling and food accumulation disappear.
4. The function of eye-closing training mainly depends on the movement and contraction of orbicularis oculi muscle. When training to close eyes, patients are required to close their eyes gently at the beginning and close their eyes 10~20 times at the same time. If you can't close your eyes completely, you can gently massage with your fingertips along the lower edge of the orbit when exposed, and then close your eyes forcibly 10 times, which is helpful to the recovery of eyelid closure function.
Hemifacial spasm, also known as hemifacial spasm, is characterized by paroxysmal and uncontrollable abnormal convulsions of one facial muscle, each of which lasts for tens of seconds to several minutes and stops. The face of mild patients is basically symmetrical, which is the same as that of ordinary people; In severe cases, facial asymmetry, spastic lateral droop and shallow nasolabial groove are the manifestations. Hemifacial spasm attacks can reach dozens to hundreds of times a day, and even convulsions continue, and there are still persistent convulsions on the face when sleeping. Long-term convulsions will lead to facial deformation and distortion, which will hinder the appearance. Frequent twitching of upper and lower eyelid muscles (orbicularis oculi muscle) will make eyes hard to open and eyes (eyes) smaller, which will affect reading newspapers and watching TV. Dare not cross the road; Driving affects driving safety. The muscles in the mouth, upper and lower lips and cheeks twitch, causing facial deformation and leaning to one side. In the late stage of onset, convulsions will develop to the neck. Frequent convulsions and long course of disease will affect the decline of facial muscle function, which is manifested in the inability to hold water in your mouth when drinking water and soup, and drooling in your mouth when sleeping. Repeated frequent convulsions can cause facial pain and tightness, affect sleep and often lead to insomnia. This disease seriously affects daily life and social activities. Patients often have a heavy psychological burden and feel sorry for themselves, especially those engaged in marketing, education and public office, as well as students. When talking face to face, they especially behave like strangers or important customers or superiors. The more nervous they are, the more serious their facial convulsions are. Therefore, the negative psychological impact of this disease leads to reluctance to participate in social activities, fear of dealing with people, and even loss of the right to smile.