How to Treat Facial Nerve Cancer

Standard treatment for advanced facial nerve schwannomas and hemangiomas is surgical excision. The surgical removal approach is determined by the size of the tumour and whether or not both ears are affected.

Primary parotid cancer refers to malignancies that originate in the parotid gland; secondary tumours, such as those that spread from the skin, are referred to by the latter term (i.e., metastatic parotid cancer). Other diseases, such as skin cancer, mucoepidermoid tumor, can also cause facial paralysis, but this is far less common.

Cancer can cause temporary or permanent facial paralysis by causing damage to the facial nerve. Typically, this facial weakness develops gradually over several weeks or months. During cancer surgery, it is routine practise to amputate the facial nerve if the disease has spread to that area. Even if the patient has no history of facial paralysis, it may be necessary to sever the face nerve in order to perform cancer surgery. In the absence of face reanimation surgery, facial nerve-severed patients may develop facial paralysis.

Why choose the parotidectomy and facelift Nerve Center for the Treatment of Cancer-Related Facial Paralysis?

They provide outstanding care to cancer patients with facial paralysis. They often collaborates with physicians at the facial nerve cancer Center, one of the major cancer centres specialising in head and neck cancer, to coordinate cancer therapies utilising face reanimation techniques. Patients undergoing therapy for head and neck cancer as well as those who have undergone treatment for head and neck cancer in the past are able to achieve optimal facial function and symmetry because to Dr. Miller's cutting-edge clinic and operating room procedures.

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