Chronic Facial Paralysis Treated With Non-absorbable APTOS Barbed Threads: A Case Report With Anatomic Considerations
Merita Mazreku, Taras Feltsan, Hisham El Falougy, Katarina Bevizova

TL;DR
A 23-year-old woman with chronic facial paralysis and nerve damage was treated using non-absorbable barbed threads to improve facial symmetry and appearance.
Contribution
This case report introduces the use of non-absorbable APTOS barbed threads for treating chronic facial paralysis and its associated soft tissue alterations.
Findings
APTOS barbed threads effectively improved facial symmetry and lifted the affected cheek and jowl areas.
The procedure resulted in a more symmetric smile and a lifted mouth corner.
Local anesthesia and minimally invasive techniques were successfully used for facial correction.
Abstract
Chronic paralysis of the facial nerve leads to degenerative facial muscle and surrounding soft tissue alterations on the involved side, making the affected patients seem older than their actual age. Moreover, contralateral facial hypertrophy worsens facial asymmetry. Correction of the drooping or wrinkled face due to aging, trauma, or other pathology has been successfully treated with the thread-lifting technique. Here, we present the case report of a 23-year-old female patient suffering from oncologic post-surgery complications associated with chronic facial nerve paralysis. She also suffered from old and new cerebellar syndromes on the right side and lesions of the oculomotor, trochlear, and abducens nerves. Based on the patient history, the condition was treated under local anesthesia by the use of APTOS minimally invasive threads with barbs made from non-absorbable material.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFacial Nerve Paralysis Treatment and Research · Facial Rejuvenation and Surgery Techniques · Reconstructive Facial Surgery Techniques
