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International, Multispecialty Expert Consensus on Nomenclature for Facial Paralysis

Samuel L. Oyer, Rachel Baptista, Kofi Boahene, Gregory H. Borschel, Patrick Byrne, David Chwei Chin Chuang, Jacob K. Dey, Jackie Diels, Pierre Guerreschi, Eyal Gur, Tessa Hadlock, Laura Hetzler, Jennifer Kim, Michael Klebuc, Daniel Labbé, Luis Lassaletta, Myriam Loyo, Samir Mardini, Matthew Q. Miller, Jon Paul PepperShai Rozen, Alison Snyder-Warwick, Scott Stephan, Kallirroi Tzafetta, Babak Azizzadeh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Variable terminology is used in the literature to describe facial synkinesis and hypertonicity following incomplete recovery from facial paralysis and its associated medical and surgical treatments. Study Objectives: Establish a nomenclature consensus for this condition among a group of facial nerve experts. Design Type: Consensus study. Methods: Using modified Delphi methodology, an international, multidisciplinary group of facial nerve experts reviewed the terminology for the name of the clinical condition and treatments of interest. Online surveys and a virtual discussion were performed to establish consensus, defined a priori as agreement by 80% of the group. Results: Twenty-five facial nerve experts established consensus after three Delphi rounds. Consensus terminology for the condition is “facial synkinesis” with 84% agreement. Medical treatment is termed “chemodenervation” with 100% agreement. Surgical treatments including “selective facial neurectomy,” “selective facial neurotomy,” “selective facial myectomy,” and “selective facial myotomy,” were defined and reached agreement of 100%. Conclusions: This international group of facial nerve experts has recommended standardized nomenclature for the condition of facial synkinesis and its various treatments. While “facial synkinesis” reached consensus as the preferred term, some experts noted it may insufficiently describe the full clinical spectrum, which includes muscle hypertonicity, weakness, and spontaneous twitching.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)408-415
Number of pages8
JournalFacial Plastic Surgery and Aesthetic Medicine
Volume27
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2025

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Surgery

Divisions

  • Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery

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