Management of Post-Facelift Facial Paralysis With Botulinum Toxin Type A

Author:

Salles Alessandra Grassi1ORCID,Mota Wellington Menezes1,Remigio Adelina Fátima do Nascimento1,de Andrade Antonio Carlos Herrmann,Gemperli Rolf1

Affiliation:

1. Division of Plastic Surgery, Hospital das Clínicas da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil

Abstract

Abstract Background Facial nerve injury after facelift is rare; hence, its treatment is poorly established. Botulinum toxin type A (BTXA) can be employed to resolve the asymmetry. To our knowledge, there is no protocol in the literature about the best timing for this treatment, injection sites, or recommended dose. Objectives The authors sought to propose a protocol to guide the management of asymmetries post-facelift. Methods Fifteen patients with post-rhytidectomy facial palsies were treated in the non-paralyzed side with BTXA. After analysis of the smile deviation vectors, it is possible to identify the muscles that should be treated. The dose varied from 1 to 2 volume-unit per point. Patients were examined after 15 days for outcomes evaluation and touch-up if needed. Patients were re-treated after 5 to 6 months in case of asymmetry recurrence. Results Symmetry was achieved in all cases. Six patients had definitive nerve lesions and required treatment every 6 months after the first session. Five patients had lesions affecting the upper third of the face; 4 of them were definitive nerve lesions. Two of the 4 patients who were treated less than 2 weeks after surgery recovered early from the post-facelift paralysis and developed reversed asymmetry due to the BTXA. In 7 patients, the post-facelift asymmetry was due to neuropraxis: the recovery from the nerve injury and BTXA treatment occurred symmetrically on both sides of the face in the following months after 1 single session. Conclusions Asymmetries post-facelift were successfully managed with the proposed protocol. The best time for injection was 2 to 4 weeks after surgery. Level of Evidence: 4

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine,Surgery

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