Title of article
Ramsay Hunt Syndrome Associated with True Vocal Cord Palsy- A Case Report
Author/Authors
Rajati, Mohsen Sinus and Surgical Endoscopic Research Center- Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad , Zarringhalam, Mohammad Ali Departments of Otorhinolaryngology- Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad
Pages
4
From page
115
To page
118
Abstract
Introduction: Varicella-zoster virus may cause an infectious disease called Ramsay Hunt syndrome. The related symptoms include facial nerve palsy (FNP), otalgia, the vesicular eruptions of the auricle and external auditory canal, less common ocular movement disorder, facial hypoesthesia, myofascial pain, vestibular symptoms, hearing loss, dysphasia, vocal cord paralysis, as well as tongue paralysis due to cranial neuropathies. Case Report: Herein, we presented the case of a 55-year-old man with left peripheral facial nerve palsy, profound hearing loss, and true vocal cord paralysis. The FNP recovered after 2 weeks and synkinesis totally improved after 4 weeks. Conclusion: Ramsay Hunt syndrome may present as cranial polyneuropathy; therefore, accurate history taking and physical examinations are necessary in this regard. The recovery rate of the vagus nerve is probably fair without polyneuropathy; however, it seems to be poor in cases suffering from polyneuropathy.
Keywords
Polyneuropathy , Ramsay Hunt syndrome , True vocal cord palsy
Journal title
Astroparticle Physics
Serial Year
2019
Record number
2485543
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