Assessment
Questionnaire
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See what questions
a doctor would ask.
See what questions
a doctor would ask.
During a consultation, your doctor will use various techniques to assess the symptom: Facial paralysis. These will include a physical examination and possibly diagnostic tests. (Note: A physical exam is always done, diagnostic tests may or may not be performed depending on the suspected condition) Your doctor will ask several questions when assessing your condition. It is important to openly share any pertinent information to help your doctor make an accurate diagnosis.
It is also very important to bring an up-to-date list of all of your all medical conditions, medications including dosages, and names of numbers of any specialist you see.
Create your printable checklist by answering questions that your doctor may ask below:
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Why: to determine if acute or chronic.
Why: e.g. if sudden onset must consider Bell's palsy, diabetic neuropathy and stroke as cause. If gradual onset must consider acoustic neuroma, advancing petrositis, brain tumor or brain abscess.
Why: e.g. if still able to furrow the brow and wrinkle the forehead, the cause of the facial paralysis is most likely due to a brain stroke or brain tumor.
Why: e.g. if both sides of the face are affected, this may suggest Guillain-Barre syndrome, bilateral parotid disease (such as sarcoidosis), primary muscle disease (such as Dystrophia myotonica), motor neurone disease and myasthenia gravis.
Why: may suggest fracture of petrous temporal bone causing a facial nerve palsy.
Why: may suggest Lyme disease.
Why: e.g. high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, smoking, atrial fibrillation, family history of early stroke.
Why: e.g. Diabetes, strokes, multiple sclerosis, sarcoidosis, middle ear infection.
Why: e.g. oral contraceptive pill may increase the risk of stroke.
Why: If paralysis or weakness was of sudden onset consider stroke, extradural or subdural hematoma (blood clot). If weakness of body is on the opposite side to the facial paralysis consider brain stem thrombosis (clot) or hemorrhage (bleed). If the weakness of one side of the body is gradual in onset consider a brain tumor, brain abscess or brain degenerative disease.
Why: should consider acoustic neuroma, petrositis, mastoiditis, herpes zoster and cholesteatoma.
Why: e.g. marked weakness on one side of the face, mouth sags, drooling from the affected side of mouth, loss of taste on front of tongue, eye may water, pain behind the ear.
The following list of conditions have 'Facial paralysis' or similar listed as a symptom in our database. This computer-generated list may be inaccurate or incomplete. Always seek prompt professional medical advice about the cause of any symptom.
Select from the following alphabetical view of conditions which include a symptom of Facial paralysis or choose View All.
The following list of medical conditions have 'Facial paralysis'
or similar listed as a medical complication in our database.
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