Plasma endothelin level in the acute stage of Bell palsy
M. Ikeda, M. Iijima, N. Kukimoto and M. Kuga
Department of Otolaryngology, Nihon University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the plasma endothelin level in the acute stage in
patients with Bell palsy (based on the hypothesis that endothelin, which is
a potent vasoconstrictor, may play a role in the mechanism of the onset of
facial nerve paralysis and in view of the fact that the etiology of Bell
palsy is still a maze of unknowns). DESIGN: The study involved 62 patients
with the acute stage (tested within 10 days of onset) of Bell palsy (i.e.,
idiopathic acute peripheral facial paralysis) and an additional 36 healthy
persons who served as control subjects. To determine the content of
endothelin, 2 ml of plasma samples was collected from each subject.
Endothelin-1 was extracted and analyzed by a radioimmunoassay by using
anti-endothelin-1 antibody. SETTING: Nihon University Itabashi Hospital, a
referral and institutional center in Tokyo, Japan. RESULTS: The patients
who were suffering from Bell palsy exhibited a statistically significant (P
< .01) increase in the endothelin level compared with that in the 36
normal control subjects. An age-matched comparison (ranges, 20-29 years and
30-39 years) of patients with Bell palsy with normal control subjects
revealed a significant difference between the normal group and the group
with Bell palsy in the plasma endothelin level for both age groups that
were tested (P < .01). The mean value of the endothelin level in
patients with Bell palsy was maximal on day 5, and the percentage of
patients with abnormally elevated endothelin levels was 100% from days 6 to
9. CONCLUSION: Endothelin, which has potent vasoconstrictive effects, may
contribute to the pathogenesis of the microcirculatory impairment that
occurs in patients with Bell palsy, mainly by promoting secondary ischemia.