1.Effect of the staging comprehensive treatment with acupuncture-moxibustion on Bell's facial palsy in the acute stage.
Jiajie CHEN ; Haiping SHI ; Wanli GAO ; Xiaowei LI ; Yuling SHU ; Yongzhe WANG ; Binjian JIANG ; Jun YANG ; Pin WANG
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2024;44(1):51-56
OBJECTIVES:
To compare the clinical effect on Bell's facial palsy in the acute stage between the staging comprehensive treatment with acupuncture-moxibustion and western medication.
METHODS:
Sixty patients with Bell's facial palsy in the acute stage were randomly divided into an observation group and a control group, with 30 cases in each one. The patients in the control group were administered orally with prednisone acetate tablets and methylcobalamin tablets until the 28th day of illness. In the observation group, the staging comprehensive treatment with acupuncture-moxibustion was adopted. On the affected side, Qianzheng (EX-HN 16), Yifeng (TE 17), Sibai (ST 2), Yangbai (GB 14), Jiache (ST 6), Dicang (ST 4) and Touwei (ST 8), etc. were stimulated. In the acute stage (Day 1 to 7 of illness), the routine acupuncture and the point-toward-point needle insertion were delivered, no any manipulation was exerted at acupoints, and the needles were retained for 30 min. In the subacute stage (Day 8 to 14 of illness), on the base of the treatment as the acute stage, the depth of needle insertion was adjusted at a part of acupoints and the even needling technique was operated by twisting needle. Besides, electroacupuncture (EA) was attached to Qianzheng (EX-HN 16) and Dicang (ST 4), with continuous wave of low intensity and high frequency, 100 Hz, for 20 min. In the recovery stage (Day 15 to 28 of illness), on the base of the treatment as the subacute stage, the heavy stimulation of acupuncture was given, in which, the sticking and lifting needle techniques were delivered after the needles were inserted from Sibai (ST 2) toward Dicang (ST 4), and from Dicang (ST 4) toward Jiache (ST 6), separately; warm needling was operated at Yifeng (TE 17), and EA changed to stimulate the acupoints with the intermittent wave of high intensity and low frequency, 2 Hz, for 30 min. Acupuncture-moxibustion was given once every other day until the end of the 28th day of illness. The level of House-Brackmann facial nerve function rating scale (H-B grade),the score of Sunnybrook facial nerve grading system (Sunnybrook), the score of facial disability index (FDI), the temperature difference in the infrared thermal imaging facial area and electromyogram (EMG) situation of the affected muscle group were observed before and after treatment in the two groups. Using musculoskeletal ultrasound,the facial nerve diameter was detected and the clinical effect was compared between the two groups.
RESULTS:
After treatment, the level of H-B grade, Sunnybrook score, the scores of physical function and social life function in FDI were improved when compared with those before treatment in the patients of either group (P<0.01, P<0.05), and the results of these evaluations in the observation group were better than those of the control group (P<0.05). After treatment, the temperature difference of the frontal area, the eye area, the zygomatic area and the mouth corner was declined in comparison with that before treatment in the two groups (P<0.05), and the temperature difference in each area in the observation group was lower than that of the control group (P<0.05).The root mean square (RMS) of the frontal muscle group, the zygomatic muscle group and the orbicularis muscle group on the affected side increased in comparison with that before treatment in the two groups (P<0.01), and RMS of the observation group was higher than that of the control group (P<0.05) after treatment. Before treatment, the diameter of the facial nerve on the affected side was larger than that on the healthy side (P<0.01), and after treatment, the diameter on the affected side was reduced when compared with that before treatment in the two groups (P<0.01); the diameter of the facial nerve on the affected side in the observation group was smaller than that of the control group (P<0.05), while, the diameter on the affected side was larger when compared with the healthy side in the control group (P<0.05). The total effective rate of the observation group was 93.3% (28/30), higher than that of the control group (83.3% [25/30], P<0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
The staging comprehensive treatment with acupuncture-moxibustion is clearly effective on Bell's facial palsy in the acute stage, which affirms the effectiveness of acupuncture-moxibustion for the acute stage of Bell's facial palsy in comparison with conventional western medication.
Humans
;
Facial Paralysis/therapy*
;
Moxibustion
;
Acupuncture Therapy
;
Bell Palsy/therapy*
;
Face
2.Acupoint selection rules of staging, syndrome types, and symptoms of acupuncture for peripheral facial paralysis based on data mining.
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2023;43(12):1457-1464
OBJECTIVES:
To analyze and explore the acupoint selection rules of different staging, syndrome types, and symptoms of acupuncture for peripheral facial paralysis based on data mining.
METHODS:
Literature regarding acupuncture for peripheral facial paralysis was retrieved in CNKI, VIP, Wanfang, SinoMed, and PubMed from January 1, 2012, to December 31, 2021. The Traditional Chinese Medicine Inheritance Assistant Platform (V 3.0), SPSS Modeler 18.0, and Cytoscape software were used to analyze the selection of acupoints based on staging, meridian distribution of acupoints, the selection of acupoints based on syndrome types, syndrome types based on staging, and symptom-based acupoint selection. Association rule analysis was performed for each stage and major syndrome types, and co-occurrence network diagrams were generated.
RESULTS:
A total of 1 695 articles were included, involving 124 acupoints with a total frequency of 5 456 times. Among 1 080 articles related to staging-based acupoint selection, the acute stage had the highest acupoint use frequency (2 224 times) and number (88 acupoints). Among all stages, the acupoints of the stomach meridian of foot-yangming were most frequently used, with Dicang (ST 4)-Yangbai (GB 14) and Dicang (ST 4)-Jiache (ST 6) being the high-frequency acupoint pairs in each stage. The top four syndrome types in terms of acupoint usage frequency were wind-cold syndrome, wind-heat syndrome, qi-blood deficiency syndrome, and liver-gallbladder damp-heat syndrome. Among 521 articles combining staging with symptoms or syndrome types with symptoms for acupoint selection, the symptom "nasolabial groove becoming shallow or disappearing" had the highest frequency of occurrence. The symptoms with the highest acupoint usage frequency and number were "forehead wrinkles becoming shallow or disappearing" and "pain behind the ear" respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
Acupoint selection for peripheral facial paralysis primarily focuses on the yang meridians in each stage, supplemented by local acupoints and based on the pathological characteristics. Syndrome differentiation and treatment should be prioritized, combined with local acupoint selection. Clinical acupoint selection can be based on a combination of staging, syndrome types, and symptoms.
Humans
;
Acupuncture Points
;
Facial Paralysis/therapy*
;
Acupuncture Therapy
;
Meridians
;
Syndrome
;
Data Mining
3.Differential diagnosis and surgical management in chondrosarcoma of the jugular foramen.
Da LIU ; Jian Ze WANG ; Jian Bin SUN ; Zhong LI ; Tong ZHANG ; Na SAI ; Yu Hua ZHU ; Wei Dong SHEN ; De Liang HUANG ; Pu DAI ; Shi Ming YANG ; Dong Yi HAN ; Wei Ju HAN
Chinese Journal of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2023;58(6):544-551
Objective: To explore the diagnosis, surgical management and outcome of jugular foramen chondrosarcoma (CSA). Methods: Fifteen patients with jugular foramen CSA hospitalized in the Department of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery of Chinese PLA General Hospital from December 2002 to February 2020 were retrospectively collected,of whom 2 were male and 13 were female, aging from 22 to 61 years old. The clinical symptoms and signs, imaging features, differential diagnosis, surgical approaches, function of facial nerve and cranial nerves IX to XII, and surgical outcomes were analyzed. Results: Patients with jugular foramen CSA mainly presented with facial paralysis, hearing loss, hoarseness, cough, tinnitus and local mass. Computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) could provide important information for diagnosis. CT showed irregular destruction on bone margin of the jugular foramen. MR demonstrated iso or hypointense on T1WI, hyperintense on T2WI and heterogeneous contrast-enhancement. Surgical approaches were chosen upon the sizes and scopes of the tumors. Inferior temporal fossa A approach was adopted in 12 cases, inferior temporal fossa B approach in 2 cases and mastoid combined parotid approach in 1 case. Five patients with facial nerve involved received great auricular nerve graft. The House Brackmann (H-B) grading scale was used to evaluate the facial nerve function. Preoperative facial nerve function ranked grade Ⅴ in 4 cases and grade Ⅵ in 1 case. Postoperative facial nerve function improved to grade Ⅲ in 2 cases and grade Ⅵ in 3 cases. Five patients presented with cranial nerves Ⅸ and Ⅹ palsies. Hoarseness and cough of 2 cases improved after operation, while the other 3 cases did not. All the patients were diagnosed CSA by histopathology and immunohistochemistry, with immunohistochemical staining showing vimentin and S-100 positive, but cytokeratin negative in tumor cells. All patients survived during 28 to 234 months' follow-up. Two patients suffered from tumor recurrence 7 years after surgery and received revision surgery. No complications such as cerebrospinal fluid leakage and intracranial infection occurred after operation. Conclusions: Jugular foramen CSA lacks characteristic symptoms or signs. Imaging is helpful to differential diagnosis. Surgery is the primary treatment of jugular foramen CSA. Patients with facial paralysis should receive surgery in time as to restore the facial nerve. Long-term follow-up is necessary after surgery in case of recurrence.
Humans
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Male
;
Female
;
Young Adult
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Adult
;
Middle Aged
;
Facial Paralysis/etiology*
;
Diagnosis, Differential
;
Jugular Foramina
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Cough
;
Hoarseness
;
Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
;
Chondrosarcoma/surgery*
4.Application status and analysis of Fu's subcutaneous needling in the treatment of peripheral facial paralysis.
Zhi-Hong XIE ; Jing LI ; Kang LI ; Mao-Hui ZHU
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2023;43(5):607-610
This paper summarizes the status of application and research of Fu's subcutaneous needling for peripheral facial paralysis, and the characteristics of different stages of peripheral facial paralysis treated with Fu's subcutaneous needling are analyzed from the aspects of intervention timing, protocol design, needle insertion point, sweeping and reperfusion activity, tube retaining time and acupuncture frequency. It is found that there are no norms and standards in sweeping and reperfusion, tube retention and acupuncture frequency in clinical application,and the exploration of staged treatment is insufficient in the research. In the future, it is necessary to form standardized operation to promote clinical promotion, and improve the research on treatment rules and mechanism according to the characteristics of disease stage.
Humans
;
Facial Paralysis/therapy*
;
Vascular Surgical Procedures
;
Acupuncture Therapy
;
Needles
5.Application of Artificial Intelligence in Recognition and Evaluation of Facial Paralysis.
Chinese Journal of Medical Instrumentation 2022;46(1):57-62
This paper reviews some recent studies on the recognition and evaluation of facial paralysis based on artificial intelligence. The research methods can be divided into two categories: facial paralysis evaluation based on artificial selection of patients' facial image eigenvalues and facial paralysis evaluation based on neural network and patients' facial images. The analysis shows that the method of manual selection of eigenvalues is suitable for small sample size, but the classification effect of adjacent ratings of facial paralysis needs to be further optimized. The neural network method can distinguish the neighboring grades of facial paralysis relatively well, but it has a higher requirement for sample size. Both of the two methods have good prospects. The features that are more closely related to the evaluation scale are selected manually, and the common development direction may be to extract the time-domain features, so as to achieve the purpose of improving the evaluation accuracy of facial paralysis.
Artificial Intelligence
;
Face
;
Facial Paralysis/diagnosis*
;
Humans
;
Neural Networks, Computer
6.WU Xu's experience of sequential therapy for peripheral facial paralysis.
Yang-Yang ZOU ; Han-Yi ZHANG ; Jing-Jing YE ; Bin LU ; Han-Jun LI
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2022;42(4):425-428
The paper introduces professor WU Xu 's experience of sequential therapy for peripheral facial paralysis. The sequential therapy refers to a staging treatment, but not rigidly adheres to it. With this therapy, the acupuncture- moxibustion regimen is modified flexibly in line with the specific symptoms of illness. At the acute phase of peripheral facial paralysis, warm acupuncture at Wangu (GB 12) is predominated and electroacupuncture is not recommended at the acupoints on the face. At the recovery phase, warm acupuncture at Zusanli (ST 36) is the main therapy and electroacupuncture is applied to the acupoints on the face appropriately. Besides, for the intractable case, the tapping technique with plum-blossom needle or skin needle should be combined and exerted in the local affected region. At the sequelae phase, in order to shorten the duration of illness, depending on the different types of facial paralysis, i.e. stiffness type, spasmodic type and flaccid type, the corresponding needling techniques are provided, i.e. bloodletting and moxibustion, strong stimulation with contralateral acupuncture and the technique for promoting the governor vessel and warming up yang.
Acupuncture Points
;
Acupuncture Therapy
;
Facial Paralysis/therapy*
;
Humans
;
Moxibustion
7.Facial Palsy with Tongue Ulcer: A Rare Initial Presentation of Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis
Ain Nabila Za&rsquo ; im Nur ; Mohd Shawal Firdaus Mohamad ; Noor Afidah Abdullah ; Geok Chin Tan ; Azman Mawaddah
Archives of Orofacial Sciences 2022;17(1):151-156
ABSTRACT
Granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA) is a rare multisystem disease. Although GPA is rare, it
commonly presents in a localised stage where its manifestation involves the upper or lower respiratory
tract before progressing to a generalised stage. Therefore, most patients with GPA will visit an oral
surgeon or an otolaryngologist to seek treatment. However, the diagnosis of GPA is often delayed as
GPA is not frequently considered as a differential diagnosis in common oral and facial diseases. The lack
of gold standard investigation for the diagnosis of GPA makes management of this case, a diagnostic
conundrum. We herein report a patient who was diagnosed with bilateral acute otitis media and left
mastoiditis complicated with facial nerve palsy, and later developed tongue ulceration one month after
his initial presentation. The ear, facial and oral symptoms represent a diagnostic red herring to a full-blown generalised stage of GPA.
Facial Paralysis
;
Oral Ulcer
;
Granulomatosis with Polyangiitis
8.Bibliometric analysis of refractory facial paralysis based on CNKI database.
Ying HAN ; Ren LIU ; Tuo-Ran WANG ; Yue JIAO ; Jin HUO ; Ying-Ying WANG ; Wen-Yan WANG ; Shun-Yue LI ; Jin-Hong YANG
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2021;41(2):229-232
The current development situation and the hotspot of the relevant research on refractory facial paralysis are explored. The articles on refractory facial paralysis are retrieved from CNKI database. The bibliographic items co-occurrence matrix builder (BICOMB) 2.0 is adopted to extract and analyze statistically literature characteristics and generate the high-frequency keywords matrix. The graphical clustering toolkit (gCLUTO) 1.0 is used to cluster the high-frequency keywords. A total of 750 articles are included, mostly published in
Acupuncture Points
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Acupuncture Therapy
;
Bibliometrics
;
China
;
Facial Paralysis/therapy*
;
Humans
;
Moxibustion
9.Professor
Dong-Dong WANG ; Bo LI ; Yong-Mei ZHA ; Han ZOU ; Ting-Ting YAO ; Wen GU ; Jun YANG ; Qing-Ping ZHANG
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2021;41(3):313-315
Professor
Acupuncture
;
Acupuncture Points
;
Acupuncture Therapy
;
Facial Paralysis/therapy*
;
Humans
;
Meridians
;
Moxibustion
10.Effect of row-like puncture at sternocleidomastoid on peripheral facial palsy at recovery stage.
Qin ZENG ; Xue-Wen MAO ; Shi-Guang WANG ; Jin YAO ; Xiao-Jing LIU ; Yi YANG
Chinese Acupuncture & Moxibustion 2021;41(6):589-592
OBJECTIVE:
To observe the effect of conventional acupuncture combined with row-like puncture at sternocleidomastoid on peripheral facial palsy at recovery stage.
METHODS:
A total of 60 patients with peripheral facial palsy at recovery stage were randomized into an observation group and a control group, 30 cases in each one. Acupuncture was applied at affected Cuanzhu (BL 2), Yangbai (GB 14), Sibai (ST 2), Quanliao (SI 18), Jiache (ST 6), Dicang (ST 4), Hegu (LI 4), Taichong (LR 3) and Zusanli (ST 36) in the control group. On the basis of the treatment in the control group, row-like puncture was applied at sternocleidomastoid (1 needle was punctured at muscle origin and insertion respectively, 3 to 4 needles were row-like punctured at the connection line of muscle origin and insertion). The treatment was given once a day, 5 times were as one course, with 2-day interval, totally 4 courses were required in the both groups. The house-brackmann (H-B) facial nerve function grade, facial nerve function rating system-dynamic view rating scale score and facial disability index (FDI) scale score [including scores of FDI physical function (FDIp) and FDI social life function (FDIs)] before and after treatment were observed, and the clinical efficacy was evaluated in the two groups.
RESULTS:
After treatment, the H-B facial nerve function grades were improved compared before treatment in the both groups (
CONCLUSION
Compared with conventional acupuncture, combination therapy with row-like puncture at sternocleidomastoid can improve the therapeutic effect of peripheral facial palsy at recovery stage.
Acupuncture Points
;
Acupuncture Therapy
;
Facial Paralysis/therapy*
;
Humans
;
Needles
;
Punctures
;
Treatment Outcome


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