We all know about facial paralysis, but talking about muscles is very unfamiliar. Plain muscles are one of the diseases of facial paralysis! Facial muscles are difficult to control on their own, with most muscles restricted to one side. They often occur on the lower eyelids, similar to "eyelid jumping", gradually spreading to the corners of the mouth, upper and lower lips, cheeks, and extending to half of the muscles. The symptoms are severe convulsions in the neck muscles on the same side! So, what are the causes of diseases caused by diseases?
The plain muscles are unknown, the face is compressed, and the lesions occur in the nervous system, causing interference with facial expression and work. Generally speaking, with muscle spasm, most of the blood vessels in a person cross each other. Cranial nerves can also compress each other, which can easily cause facial muscles.
The facial nervous system is paralyzed, and sequelae occur after recovery. Paralysis of the facial nervous system, which may be inflammation of the facial nerves, causes nerve attacks, changes the facial tissue structure, and does not recover in time.
Some surgical sequelae cause one side of the face to change. After the operation, the nerves of the face are in the process of recovery, and there is conflict with other related nerves, causing other neurons to fire, and there is facial muscle tissue, causing facial muscle spasm.
Treatment of facial nerve convulsions
1. Drug treatment. Drug treatment generally adopts a method of controlling the disease, mainly using anti-epileptic drugs to suppress intermittent rejection nerves, and the patient can achieve significant relief in a short period of time. However, there are many hidden dangers in drug treatment. Some patients often have adverse reactions, such as drug rash, hypothermia, and lymph node protein. It is mainly used for patients with mild symptoms and conservative conditions.
2. Acupuncture treatment. Clinical studies have shown that acupuncture and acupoint stimulation can improve the symptoms of facial paralysis to a certain extent. However, this treatment also has certain limitations, and patients cannot receive tension, fear, hunger, fatigue, or acupuncture treatments. Therefore, this treatment is suitable for patients with high psychological quality and conditions that are less than a week old.
3. Surgical treatment. After surgery, most people can gradually regain their facial nerves, and the patient's symptoms can improve significantly. However, this method is risky, and the surgical process is prone to auditory nerve damage, leading to symptoms such as excessive or permanent hearing loss, deafness, tinnitus, intraoperative bleeding, intracranial or intracranial infection.