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  Vol. 105 No. 8, August 1979 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Re-animation of the Paralyzed Face

New Approaches, by Leonard Ruben, 367 pp, 352 illus, $38.50, St Louis, CV Mosby Co, 1977.

ROGER L. CRUMLEY, MD, Reviewer
San Francisco

Arch Otolaryngol. 1979;105(8):503.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

This 367-page work is divided into four parts: (1) "Mechanism of Facial Expression and Pathophysiology of Degeneration"; (2) "Etiology of Disruption of the Facial Neuromuscular Motor Unit"; (3) "Contemporary Concepts in Free Nerve and Muscle Grafting"; (4) "Re-animation of the Paralyzed Face." The contributors include otolaryngologists, plastic surgeons, a neurologist, a neurosurgeon, a neuropathologist, and a physical medicine specialist. The organization is such that the reader is taken through anatomy and pathophysiology of the various types of facial paralysis, and then an excellent section on the basic science of nerve and muscle grafting leads into the practical section that deals with reanimation procedures. This third section, itself, is well worth the purchase price of the book.

The reanimation procedures are subdivided into the following categories: immediate treatment (this includes a neurologist's chapter on medical treatment for Bell's palsy and an otolaryngologist's concepts with regard to surgical treatment for this disease); . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]



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