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Early evaluations identified 263 motor cranial nerve injuries, accounting for 6.9% of the entire study group. Of these, 116 affected the hypoglossal nerve, 91 the facial nerve, 49 the laryngeal nerve, and 7 other nerves such as the glossopharyngeal and accessory nerves.
12 sie 2024 · The aim of this prospective monocentric cohort study was to analyze the risk of otolaryngologist-assessed cranial nerve injuries (CNIs) following carotid endarterectomy (CEA) in our academic center during a 15-year period, and to identify possible risk factors for CNI development.
28 lip 2016 · The vagus nerve appears to be the most frequently injured cranial nerve after CEA, followed by the hypoglossal nerve, with only a small proportion of these injuries being permanent.
The vagus nerve appears to be the most frequently injured cranial nerve after CEA, followed by the hypoglossal nerve, with only a small proportion of these injuries being permanent. The CNI rate has significantly decreased over the past 35 years to a point indicating that CNIs should not be consider ….
Conclusion: The vagus nerve appears to be the most frequently injured cranial nerve after CEA, followed by the hypoglossal nerve, with only a small proportion of these injuries being permanent. The CNI rate has signi cantly.
30 sie 2024 · Postoperative complications of CEA, including myocardial infarction; perioperative stroke; postoperative bleeding; and the potential consequences of cervical hematoma, nerve injury, infection, and carotid restenosis, which may require repeat carotid intervention, are reviewed here.
Injury to the following nerves are distinguished: facial nerve (VII), facial droop; glossopharyngeal nerve (IX), swallowing difficulty unless other diagnosis confirmed; vagus nerve (X), hoarseness unless laryngoscopy normal; hypoglossal nerve (XII), any tongue deviation or discoordination.