Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation in Congenital Facial Paralysis

Congenital facial paralysis (CFP) is a paralysis of facial nerve that occurs in birth or shortly after birth due to congenital or traumatic causes, has a prevalence of 1.2-2.4/1000. Our aim is to determine the effectiveness of physiotherapy and rehabilitation in CFP. We assessed a 9-year-old girl, w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Müberra TANRIVERDİ, Büşra AKTAŞ, Arife Ceylan ÜSTÜN, Merve ÇAKIRCA, Büşra YENER
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Galenos Publishing House 2019-10-01
Series:Bezmiâlem Science
Subjects:
Online Access: http://bezmialemscience.org/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/physiotherapy-and-rehabilitation-in-congenital-fac/30613
id doaj-d44b8e463e9c4b42902797a9f49ef4bc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d44b8e463e9c4b42902797a9f49ef4bc2020-11-25T01:39:50ZengGalenos Publishing HouseBezmiâlem Science2148-23732148-23732019-10-017435235410.14235/bas.galenos.2019.263613049054Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation in Congenital Facial ParalysisMüberra TANRIVERDİ0Büşra AKTAŞ1Arife Ceylan ÜSTÜN2Merve ÇAKIRCA3Büşra YENER4 Bezmialem Vakıf University Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, İstanbul, Turkey Bezmialem Vakıf University Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, İstanbul, Turkey Bezmialem Vakıf University Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, İstanbul, Turkey Bezmialem Vakıf University Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, İstanbul, Turkey Bezmialem Vakıf University Faculty of Health Sciences, Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, İstanbul, Turkey Congenital facial paralysis (CFP) is a paralysis of facial nerve that occurs in birth or shortly after birth due to congenital or traumatic causes, has a prevalence of 1.2-2.4/1000. Our aim is to determine the effectiveness of physiotherapy and rehabilitation in CFP. We assessed a 9-year-old girl, who had no congenital injuries, with muscle test, House Brackmann Facial Grading Systems (HBFGS) and Sunnybrook Facial Grading Systems (SFGS). She got level 4 in HBFGS scale; and 20 points for resting symmetry, 72 points for voluntary movement symmetry and 4 points for synkinesis in SFGS scale. The patient received our treatment including face massage, electrotherapy, mimic muscle and functional exercises lasting one hour per session, 3 days a week for 24 weeks. Biopsychosocial positive feedback was obtained after the ongoing treatment program, although there were no numerical changes in assessment scales. Although reported cases in the literature are irreversible, studies on rehabilitation are needed. http://bezmialemscience.org/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/physiotherapy-and-rehabilitation-in-congenital-fac/30613 congenital facial paralysisphysiotherapyrehabilitation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Müberra TANRIVERDİ
Büşra AKTAŞ
Arife Ceylan ÜSTÜN
Merve ÇAKIRCA
Büşra YENER
spellingShingle Müberra TANRIVERDİ
Büşra AKTAŞ
Arife Ceylan ÜSTÜN
Merve ÇAKIRCA
Büşra YENER
Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation in Congenital Facial Paralysis
Bezmiâlem Science
congenital facial paralysis
physiotherapy
rehabilitation
author_facet Müberra TANRIVERDİ
Büşra AKTAŞ
Arife Ceylan ÜSTÜN
Merve ÇAKIRCA
Büşra YENER
author_sort Müberra TANRIVERDİ
title Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation in Congenital Facial Paralysis
title_short Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation in Congenital Facial Paralysis
title_full Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation in Congenital Facial Paralysis
title_fullStr Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation in Congenital Facial Paralysis
title_full_unstemmed Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation in Congenital Facial Paralysis
title_sort physiotherapy and rehabilitation in congenital facial paralysis
publisher Galenos Publishing House
series Bezmiâlem Science
issn 2148-2373
2148-2373
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Congenital facial paralysis (CFP) is a paralysis of facial nerve that occurs in birth or shortly after birth due to congenital or traumatic causes, has a prevalence of 1.2-2.4/1000. Our aim is to determine the effectiveness of physiotherapy and rehabilitation in CFP. We assessed a 9-year-old girl, who had no congenital injuries, with muscle test, House Brackmann Facial Grading Systems (HBFGS) and Sunnybrook Facial Grading Systems (SFGS). She got level 4 in HBFGS scale; and 20 points for resting symmetry, 72 points for voluntary movement symmetry and 4 points for synkinesis in SFGS scale. The patient received our treatment including face massage, electrotherapy, mimic muscle and functional exercises lasting one hour per session, 3 days a week for 24 weeks. Biopsychosocial positive feedback was obtained after the ongoing treatment program, although there were no numerical changes in assessment scales. Although reported cases in the literature are irreversible, studies on rehabilitation are needed.
topic congenital facial paralysis
physiotherapy
rehabilitation
url http://bezmialemscience.org/archives/archive-detail/article-preview/physiotherapy-and-rehabilitation-in-congenital-fac/30613
work_keys_str_mv AT muberratanriverdi physiotherapyandrehabilitationincongenitalfacialparalysis
AT busraaktas physiotherapyandrehabilitationincongenitalfacialparalysis
AT arifeceylanustun physiotherapyandrehabilitationincongenitalfacialparalysis
AT mervecakirca physiotherapyandrehabilitationincongenitalfacialparalysis
AT busrayener physiotherapyandrehabilitationincongenitalfacialparalysis
_version_ 1725048891418607616