Bell's Palsy Treatment in Ranchi
Sudden facial paralysis is alarming, but most patients recover fully with prompt, appropriate treatment. Dr. Yuvraj Lahre, DM Neurology (AIIMS), provides expert diagnosis and management at Neurovision Clinic, Ranchi.
What is Bell's Palsy?
Bell's palsy is an acute, idiopathic peripheral facial nerve (cranial nerve VII) paralysis causing sudden weakness or complete paralysis of the muscles on one side of the face. The facial nerve controls the muscles of facial expression, tear and saliva production, taste from the front two-thirds of the tongue, and a small muscle in the ear. When the nerve becomes inflamed and swollen within its narrow bony passage (the fallopian canal), signal transmission is blocked, resulting in unilateral facial weakness. The onset is typically dramatic — patients often wake up with facial drooping or notice it while brushing teeth or drinking. Bell's palsy is the most common cause of unilateral facial paralysis, affecting approximately 20 to 30 per 100,000 people per year, with peak incidence in the third to fifth decades. Pregnancy (especially third trimester) and diabetes increase the risk.
Symptoms of Bell's Palsy
- •Sudden onset of unilateral facial weakness developing over hours to a day, reaching maximum within 48 to 72 hours
- •Inability to close the eye on the affected side completely — leading to dryness, irritation, and tearing
- •Drooping of the corner of the mouth with difficulty smiling, drinking, and eating
- •Loss of the nasolabial fold (crease from nose to mouth corner) on the affected side
- •Altered or reduced taste on the front two-thirds of the tongue on the affected side
- •Hyperacusis — sounds seeming abnormally loud in the affected ear from stapedius muscle paralysis
- •Pain behind or in front of the ear, which may precede the paralysis by a day or two
Clinical Observations at Neurovision
Dr. Yuvraj Lahre at Neurovision observes a seasonal spike in Bell's palsy cases in Ranchi during the monsoon months (July–September). We suspect a viral trigger linked to the spike in upper respiratory infections during this period, but the monsoon clustering is distinct from the year-round incidence reported in Western literature.
Standard medical literature states:
Standard otolaryngology literature describes Bell's palsy as an acute, idiopathic facial nerve paralysis that is typically self-limiting, with corticosteroids improving recovery rates if started within 72 hours.
We counsel patients in Hindi that even though one side of the face is paralysed, the vast majority recover fully within 3–6 months with early steroid treatment. We teach eye protection techniques (lubricating drops, taping the eyelid at night) and facial exercises at the first visit.
— Dr. Yuvraj Lahre
Causes & Risk Factors
- •Viral reactivation — leading theory is HSV-1 reactivation in the geniculate ganglion causing inflammation and swelling
- •Ramsay Hunt syndrome — varicella-zoster virus reactivation with facial paralysis and painful vesicular rash in the ear canal; worse prognosis
- •Ischemia and edema — the narrow, unyielding fallopian canal makes the facial nerve vulnerable to compression from any swelling
- •Diabetes mellitus — people with diabetes have a 4 to 5 times higher risk of Bell's palsy
- •Pregnancy — especially third trimester and immediate postpartum period
- •Lyme disease — important infectious cause in endemic regions, sometimes bilateral, requiring antibiotic treatment
Diagnostic Tests
Neurological Examination
Detailed cranial nerve exam to confirm peripheral pattern (entire half of face including forehead) and check for involvement of other cranial nerves, which would argue against idiopathic Bell's palsy.
MRI Brain
Not required for classic Bell's palsy but indicated when atypical (slow onset, bilateral, other cranial nerve deficits), no recovery after 3 to 6 months, or when Ramsay Hunt syndrome, tumor, or multiple sclerosis is suspected.
Nerve Conduction Studies / Electroneuronography
In severe or prolonged cases, facial nerve conduction studies quantify axonal loss and predict recovery. CMAP amplitude reduction over 90 percent within 14 days predicts poorer prognosis.
Treatment Approach
Dr. Yuvraj Lahre emphasizes early intervention — the first 72 hours are critical:
- High-Dose Corticosteroid Therapy
- Prednisolone 60 mg daily for 5 days followed by a 5-day taper, or equivalent. Steroids reduce inflammation and edema of the facial nerve, improving both the rate and completeness of recovery. Treatment begins at the first consultation.
- Antiviral Therapy (Selective)
- Combined valacyclovir with steroids may provide modest additional benefit in severe cases (House-Brackmann grade IV or higher). Specifically indicated for Ramsay Hunt syndrome where antivirals are essential.
- Eye Protection and Corneal Care
- Aggressive protection: preservative-free tears every 1 to 2 hours during the day, lubricating ointment at bedtime, mechanical eyelid closure with tape during sleep, protective eyewear during the day. Any eye redness, pain, or vision change prompts immediate ophthalmology consultation.
- Facial Rehabilitation
- Guided facial exercises to maintain muscle tone and prevent contractures. Neuromuscular retraining techniques reduce synkinesis. Electrical stimulation is generally not recommended. Dr. Lahre coordinates with rehabilitation specialists for optimal recovery.
When to See a Doctor
- !Immediately upon noticing sudden facial drooping or paralysis — early treatment within 72 hours significantly improves outcomes
- !If you develop facial weakness, even if mild, to differentiate Bell's palsy from stroke — expert examination is required
- !If facial paralysis is accompanied by ear pain, rash, or hearing loss — these suggest Ramsay Hunt syndrome needing urgent antivirals
- !If your eye becomes red, painful, or vision becomes blurry — corneal exposure requires immediate eye care
- !For follow-up monitoring of recovery — Dr. Lahre tracks facial function and adjusts management for incomplete recovery
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Bell's palsy and what causes it?
Bell's palsy is an acute, idiopathic peripheral facial nerve (cranial nerve VII) paralysis — sudden weakness of the muscles on one side of the face, developing over hours to a day. The leading theory is reactivation of latent herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) in the geniculate ganglion, causing inflammation and swelling of the facial nerve within its narrow bony canal. This swelling compresses the nerve, blocking signal transmission. It is the most common cause of acute unilateral facial paralysis. Importantly, Bell's palsy is a diagnosis of exclusion — stroke, Lyme disease, Ramsay Hunt syndrome, trauma, and tumors must be ruled out. The key distinguishing feature from stroke is that Bell's palsy affects the entire half of the face including the forehead, whereas stroke typically spares the forehead due to dual innervation of the upper face.
How is Bell's palsy treated and what is the recovery rate?
The cornerstone of treatment is early, high-dose oral corticosteroids (prednisolone 60 mg daily for 5 days, tapered over the next 5 days). Steroids reduce facial nerve inflammation and swelling within the bony canal, improving recovery rate and speed. Treatment should begin ideally within 72 hours of symptom onset. Antiviral therapy (valacyclovir) may be added in severe cases, though evidence for added benefit beyond steroids alone is modest. With appropriate early treatment, approximately 85 percent of patients recover satisfactory facial function, with most showing improvement within 2 to 3 weeks and full recovery within 3 to 6 months. Dr. Lahre initiates treatment at the first consultation and monitors recovery closely.
What eye care is needed during Bell's palsy?
Because Bell's palsy prevents complete eyelid closure on the affected side, the cornea is at risk of drying, abrasion, and infection. Dr. Lahre emphasizes aggressive eye protection from day one: preservative-free artificial tears every 1 to 2 hours during the day, lubricating ophthalmic ointment at night, taping the eyelid closed during sleep, wearing protective glasses during the day, and avoiding fans, wind, and dusty environments. If the eye becomes red, painful, or vision becomes blurry, urgent ophthalmology evaluation is needed to rule out corneal ulceration. In prolonged cases with persistent incomplete lid closure, referral for lid procedures is coordinated.
How is Bell's palsy different from a stroke?
This distinction is critical. Bell's palsy causes peripheral facial nerve paralysis affecting the entire half of the face — forehead, eyebrow, eyelid, cheek, and mouth are all weak on one side. Ask the person to raise their eyebrows: in Bell's palsy, the forehead on the affected side does not wrinkle. A stroke causing facial weakness typically affects only the lower half of the face while sparing the forehead. Additionally, stroke is usually accompanied by other neurological signs — arm or leg weakness on the same side, speech difficulty, or sensory loss. Dr. Yuvraj Lahre performs a detailed neurological examination to accurately differentiate at the first consultation. If any doubt exists, urgent brain imaging is arranged.