M'luru: KMC hospital successfully treats 51 year old with complications with jaw operating dystonia


Media Release

Mangaluru, Feb 2: KMC Hospital, Mangaluru, successfully treated a 51-year-old patient who was admitted to the hospital for a case of Oromandibular Dystonia. Ravi (name changed) was diagnosed with jaw opening dystonia where he was facing difficulty in closing the jaw, speaking, and chewing food. Initially, medication wasgiven to improve dystonia, which resulted in little improvement. Later, CT-guided Botox injection was done by Dr Keerthiraj, Interventional Neuroradiologistand DrRohitPai, Neurologist, KMC Hospital, Mangaluru.

Oromandibular dystonia is a type of dystonia characterized by abnormal contractions of the jaw muscles, mouth and tongue. Patients of jaw dystonia experience contractions of the lateral pterygoids and digastric muscle. These muscles are involved in the opening of the jaw. Patients with jaw opening dystonia are unable to close their jaw as it is kept open by excessive contraction ofthe lateral pterygoid muscle (thick facial muscle that provides movements to the joints of the skull).

Botulinum toxin is a neurotoxin produced by the bacteria Clostridium botulinum. The toxin acts in the neuromuscular junction and disrupts the release of vesiclesin the neuromuscular junctionthat contain Acetylcholine, the neurotransmitter which is responsible for muscle contraction. This causes paralysis of the muscle. There are seven main types of botulinum toxins, of which types A and B can cause disease in humans. Botulinum toxin acts in the neuromuscular junction and disrupts the release of vesicles containing the neurotransmitter Acetylcholine which is responsible for muscle contraction.This helps in paralyzing the muscles which are overactive in dystonia. This is available commercially as Botox.

Speaking about the case, Dr Rohit Pai, Neurologist, KMC Hospital, Mangaluru, said, “The patient was having difficulty in closing the jaw, which caused difficulty in speaking, chewing, and consumingfood. He was initially given medicines to improve dystonia. That resulted in minimal improvement. Hence, he was then given a Botox injection. Generally, Botox can be given into the lateral pterygoid muscles by extraoral (from outside the mouth) or intraoral approach (inside the mouth). The most commonly used approach is extraoral (from outside the mouth).”

Furthermore, he said, “CT-guided injection box technique was used where the muscle was identified by CT. A needle was inserted into the lateral pterygoids by the extraoral approach, a technique where the depth of the muscle ismeasured, and Botox injected. The advantage of this technique is that the injection can be given accurately into the desired muscles improving the outcome. Also, the side-effects associated with blind injections, which could injure the maxillary artery, can be avoided. This patient showed remarkable improvement after the procedure.”

About Manipal Hospitals:
As a pioneer in healthcare, Manipal Hospitals is among the top healthcare providers in India serving over 4 million patients annually. Its focus is to develop an affordable, high-quality healthcare framework through its multispecialty and tertiary care delivery spectrum and further extend it to out-of-hospital care. With the completion of the acquisition of a 100 percent stake in Columbia Asia Hospitals in India and the addition of Vikram Hospital, the integrated network today has a pan-India footprint of 27 hospitals across 14 cities with 7,300+ beds, and a talented pool of 4,000 doctors and an employee strength of over 11,000.

Manipal Hospitals provides comprehensive curative and preventive care for a multitude of patients from around the globe. Manipal Hospitals is NABH, AAHRPP accredited and most of the hospitals in its network are NABL, ER, Blood Bank accredited and recognized for Nursing Excellence. Manipal Hospitals has also been recognized as the most respected and patient-recommended hospital in India through various consumer surveys.

  

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Title: M'luru: KMC hospital successfully treats 51 year old with complications with jaw operating dystonia



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