Symptoms of mild facial stroke can be characterized by shallow nasolabial folds on one side, crooked corners of the mouth on one side, and deflected tongue extension.
Symptoms of mild facial stroke can be categorized into nuclear and supranuclear. In nuclear mild facial stroke, the onset of the disease is in the brainstem, and the loss of function of the facial nerve nucleus causes the symptoms of facial paralysis. Supranuclear mild strokes occur in the lower part of the contralateral precentral gyrus, where dysfunction in the transmission of motor commands results in facial paralysis.
In other cases, facial paralysis is not caused by stroke, but by peripheral facial nerve injury, resulting in ipsilateral facial nerve palsy. Peripheral facial nerve palsy can be accompanied by drooping eyelids and loss of frontal lines.
If there are symptoms such as shallow nasolabial folds on one side, crooked corners of the mouth or oblique tongue extension, etc., you should go to the hospital in time to clarify the cause and get reasonable treatment under the guidance of the doctor.