Taiyuan treatment of facial muscle spasm, facial muscle spasm is a common facial nerve disorder that manifests as involuntary unilateral facial jumping. It usually starts with eyelid jumping and gradually progresses to twitching of the nose, corners of the mouth and neck muscles. Because eyelid fluttering is relatively common in life, facial myoclonus is often misinterpreted at first as ordinary eyelid fluttering and ignored. Facial myospasm attacks do not produce very strong symptoms such as pain and itching, so many patients put off treatment for years or even a decade. There is no need to delay facial muscle spasm, as it is unlikely to heal itself, no matter how long it takes. The reason for the primary facial muscle spasm is due to the compression of the facial nerve cadre by blood vessels. When the facial nerve is compressed by abnormal walking vessels, such as the anterior inferior cerebellar artery, vertebral nerve artery, posterior inferior cerebellar artery compression, arteriovenous malformation, etc., it will lead to abnormal discharge of the facial nerve, which will be transmitted to the face and lead to intermittent facial twitching, and this cause accounts for 96.5% of facial muscle spasm patients. In the end, the most important treatment for facial spasm is to solve the problem of the “responsible blood vessel”. The microvascular decompression surgery is to find the blood vessel compressing the facial nerve and separate it under a microscope, using a special material of cotton pad to separate it. After the compression is removed, the facial muscle spasm and twitching problem will also be cured. Unlike traditional craniotomy, microvascular decompression surgery is a minimally invasive procedure with a 3-4 cm wound behind the ear, which has the advantage of less bleeding, fewer complications, and a cure rate of over 95%. Neurophysiological detection The neurophysiological monitoring used in microvascular decompression surgery predicts the facial twitching when the patient is awake in the state of anesthesia, and objectively responds to whether the facial and auditory nerves are damaged during surgery. This allows the surgeon to take timely action. It is called the third eye in surgery by doctors, which effectively guarantees the safety of surgery.