Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Division of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
JAMA Facial Plast Surg. 2018 Jul 1;20(4):272-276. doi: 10.1001/jamafacial.2017.2402.
When able to identify facial paralysis, members of society regard individuals with facial paralysis differently. They perceive a decrease in attractiveness, more negative affect, and lower quality of life. However, the ability of lay people in society to accurately identify the presence of facial paralysis has not yet been defined.
To determine societal members' ability to (1) identify paralysis in varying degrees of paralysis severity and (2) localize the defect on the face.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A prospective observational study conducted in an academic tertiary referral center using a group of 380 casual observers was carried out.
Surveys were designed containing smiling and repose images of normal faces and faces with unilateral facial paralysis of 3 severity levels (low, medium, and high) as categorized by House-Brackmann (HB) grade. The photographs were then shown to casual observers in a web-based survey. After reviewing both normal faces and faces with varying degrees of paralysis, they then indicated (1) whether paralysis was present and (2) if so, where the paralysis was on the face.
A total of 380 participants (267 [70.3%] women and 113 [29.7%] men with a mean [SD] age of 29 [12] years) successfully completed the survey, viewing 2860 facial photographs in aggregate. The accuracy rate of identifying paralysis increased from low-grade through high-grade paralysis. Facial paralysis was identified in 249 (34.6%) of 719 facial photographs with low-grade paralysis, 448 (63.2%) of 709 with medium-grade paralysis, and 696 (96.7%) of 720 with high-grade paralysis (χ2 = 912.6, P < .001); 6.2% (44/731) of normal faces were incorrectly identified as having paralysis (χ2 = 912.6, P < .001). Participants correctly localized paralysis in 157 (63.0%) of 249 low-grade photographs, 307 (68.5%) of 448 medium-grade photographs, and 554 (79.6%) of 696 high-grade photographs (χ2 = 32.5, P < .001). In general, participants tended to identify facial paralysis more accurately in smiling vs repose faces (48.6% vs 20.6%, 92.4% vs 33.7%, and 96.7% vs 96.6% in low-, medium-, and high-grade paralysis, respectively) (χ2 = 62.2, P < .001; χ2 = 262.6, P < .001; χ2 = 0.0, P = .96, respectively).
The ability of individuals to identify the presence of facial paralysis increased as paralysis severity increased. Further, smiling increased accurate identification. However, even when individuals can identify paralysis, they are not necessarily able to accurately localize the paralysis on a face. This may speak to a phenomenon in which perception of a facial defect comes from a holistic interpretation of a face, rather than a clinically accurate specification of the defect location. These findings are important in the future counseling of patients.
NA.
当能够识别面瘫时,社会成员会对患有面瘫的个体有不同的看法。他们认为面瘫患者的吸引力下降,负面情绪增加,生活质量降低。然而,社会成员准确识别面瘫的能力尚未确定。
确定社会成员(1)识别不同程度面瘫的能力,以及(2)对面瘫在面部的定位能力。
设计、设置和参与者:在一家学术三级转诊中心进行了一项前瞻性观察研究,共纳入 380 名偶然观察者。
设计了包含正常面部和 3 种面瘫严重程度(低、中、高)的单侧面瘫面部的微笑和静止图像的调查。然后,将这些照片在一个基于网络的调查中展示给偶然观察者。在查看了正常面部和不同程度面瘫的面部后,他们会(1)是否存在面瘫,以及(2)如果存在面瘫,面瘫在面部的哪个位置。
共有 380 名参与者(267 名女性[70.3%]和 113 名男性[29.7%],平均年龄[标准差]为 29[12]岁)成功完成了调查,总共查看了 2860 张面部照片。随着面瘫严重程度的增加,识别面瘫的准确率也随之提高。在 719 张轻度面瘫照片中,有 249 张(34.6%)识别出面瘫,709 张中度面瘫照片中有 448 张(63.2%),720 张重度面瘫照片中有 696 张(96.7%)(χ2=912.6,P<0.001);有 6.2%(44/731)的正常面部被错误地识别为患有面瘫(χ2=912.6,P<0.001)。参与者正确定位了 249 张轻度面瘫照片中的 157 张(63.0%)、448 张中度面瘫照片中的 307 张(68.5%)和 696 张重度面瘫照片中的 554 张(79.6%)(χ2=32.5,P<0.001)。总的来说,与静止面部相比,参与者在微笑面部上识别面瘫的准确性更高(低、中、重度面瘫分别为 48.6%对 20.6%,92.4%对 33.7%,96.7%对 96.6%)(χ2=62.2,P<0.001;χ2=262.6,P<0.001;χ2=0.0,P=0.96)。
个体识别面瘫存在的能力随着面瘫严重程度的增加而提高。此外,微笑增加了准确识别的可能性。然而,即使个体能够识别面瘫,他们也不一定能够准确地定位面瘫在面部的位置。这可能表明,对面部缺陷的感知来自于对面部的整体解释,而不是对面部缺陷位置的临床准确描述。这些发现对未来的患者咨询很重要。
无。