
1. Navigation
1.1. EFNS Conference overview
1.2. Free Teaching Course overview
2. Central lesions vs peripheral lesions
2.1. Facial nerve branches
2.1.1. Clinical picture removed pending authorization
2.2. After Ischaemia
2.2.1. Deviation conjugee to the right after ischaemia of right precentral region
2.2.1.1. Clinical picture removed pending authorization
2.2.2. Note Left central facial palsy
2.2.2.1. Clinical picture removed pending authorization
2.2.3. Clinical picture removed pending authorization
2.3. Clinical picture removed pending authorization
3. Proptosis
3.1. High venous pressure behind eyebulb
3.1.1. Sinus Cavernosus
3.1.1.1. Fistula of the cavernosus sinus after head trauma
3.1.1.2. You could "listen" to the head and hear ruits
3.2. Clinical picture removed pending authorization
4. Marcus-Gunn-Phenomenon
4.1. "Winking Jaw"
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4.2. Congenital innervation defect
5. Take home message
5.1. Listen to the patient
5.2. Look at the patient
6. Neuro-Muscular
6.1. Myasthenia Gravis
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7. Dystrophic Myotonic Muscular Dystrophy
7.1. More signs of atrophy
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7.2. Clinical picture removed pending authorization
8. Our face is
8.1. Determined genetically
8.2. Determined by diseases
9. Polyneuropathy & hairloss
9.1. Thallium poisoning
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10. Swollen Temporal Artery
10.1. Arteriitis temporalis
10.1.1. Clinical picture removed pending authorization
11. Harlequin Syndrome
11.1. Loss of autonomic innervation
11.2. Sometimes after a dissection
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12. Horner
12.1. Clinical picture removed pending authorization
13. congenital
13.1. Agenisis of a facial muscle
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13.2. hemi atrophia facialis
13.2.1. Clinical picture removed pending authorization