NeuroSci (May 2022)

Bilateral Facial Palsy as the Onset of Neurosarcoidosis: A Case Report and a Revision of Literature

  • Chiara Gallo,
  • Letizia Mazzini,
  • Claudia Varrasi,
  • Domizia Vecchio,
  • Eleonora Virgilio,
  • Roberto Cantello

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/neurosci3020023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
pp. 321 – 331

Abstract

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Unilateral facial nerve palsy (FNP) is one of the most common cranial mononeuropathies. Among rare etiologies, neurosarcoidosis (NS) can cause bilateral involvement (both recurring and simultaneous) only in 15% to 25% of cases. The rarity of this systemic disease and its clinical heterogeneity, due to granulomatous inflammation that may affect many anatomic substrates, frequently make the diagnosis a real challenge for the clinician. Based on laboratory and instrumental tests, a careful diagnostic algorithm must be adopted to avoid misdiagnosis and delay in treatment. We present a 52-year-old woman with an acute onset of unilateral right FNP, rapidly developing contralateral involvement (simultaneous bilateral FNP). Lung findings pointed towards a systemic disease, and then lymph node biopsy confirmed NS. Corticosteroid therapy was started. After three years of follow-up, the patient is still in remission with a low prednisone dose. We discuss the differential diagnosis of bilateral FNP, focusing on clinical presentation, diagnosis, and treatment of NS. We have performed a literature revision, confirming bilateral FNP, outside Heerfordt syndrome, to be rare and sometimes represent the only neurological manifestation of NS onset.

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