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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Facial nerve repair after ear surgery in West Highland terrier

By Calvo, Ignacio et al.·Published in Journal of the South African Veterinary Association·2014·Small Animal Hospital - Division of Small Animal Sciences, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Epineurial repair of an iatrogenic facial nerve neurotmesis after total ear canal ablation and lateral bulla osteotomy in a dog with concurrent cranio-mandibular osteopathy.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A 7-year-old male West Highland white terrier was brought in for severe ear infections that weren't responding to treatment. During surgery to remove the ear canal, the surgeon accidentally damaged the dog's facial nerve, leading to paralysis on one side of his face. Fortunately, the team performed a delicate microsurgery to repair the nerve. After a few months of recovery, the dog's facial movement returned to normal, marking a successful outcome for this rare complication.

People also search for: dog ear infection treatment · West Highland white terrier facial nerve paralysis · dog surgery recovery time

Abstract

A 7-year-old male entire West Highland white terrier was referred to the Small Animal Hospital at the University of Glasgow for bilateral, chronic, medically unresponsive otitis media and externa. A history of cranio-mandibular osteopathy was also reported. Bilateral total ear canal ablation and lateral bulla osteotomy was performed with the aid of a pneumatic burr. Extensive bone proliferation was present bilaterally originating from the caudal mandibular ramus and tympanic bulla which incorporated the horizontal canal on each side. The right facial nerve was identified leaving the stylomastoid foramen and running in a cranial direction through a 1.5 cm diameter cuff of bone surrounding the horizontal canal and external acoustic meatus. Despite careful dissection, a facial nerve neurotmesis ensued which required microsurgical epineurial repair. Neurologic examination performed 12 h post-operatively revealed abnormalities consistent with right facial nerve paralysis. At 3 months, the facial nerve function was found to have improved significantly and was assessed to be normal four months after surgery. To the authors' knowledge, this clinical communication described the first reported clinical case where unilateral facial nerve paralysis resulting from iatrogenic facial nerve neurotmesis was successfully treated by microsurgical epineurial repair.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25686402/