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Symptoms of Frey's Syndrome
Study Purpose
The goal of this observational study is to describe the prevalence of typical and atypical signs and symptoms of Frey's syndrome, the affected areas and the severity of each symptom/sign. Participants will be asked will asked about.
- - Presence or the absence of: a.
gustatory sweating; b. gustatory flushing; c. gustatory itching; d. paresthesia; e. pain.- - Grade of severity: a.
absence; b. mild; c. moderate; d. almost severe; e. severe.- - Affected area: a.
preauricular; b. retroauricolar; c. temporal; d. retrangulomandibular; e. cheekRecruitment Criteria
Healthy volunteers are participants who do not have a disease or condition, or related conditions or symptoms
An interventional clinical study is where participants are assigned to receive one or more interventions (or no intervention) so that researchers can evaluate the effects of the interventions on biomedical or health-related outcomes.
An observational clinical study is where participants identified as belonging to study groups are assessed for biomedical or health outcomes.
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Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
- - History of radiation therapy of the head-neck district.
- Patients affected by neurologic diseasesTrial Details
This trial id was obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health, providing information on publicly and privately supported clinical studies of human participants with locations in all 50 States and in 196 countries.
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Phase 4: Studies occurring after FDA has approved a drug for marketing, efficacy, or optimal use.
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The disease, disorder, syndrome, illness, or injury that is being studied.
The Frey's syndrome classically appears with sweating and hyperemia that occur almost immediately after tasting foods, particularly spicy ones, in the distribution of the auriculotemporal nerve region hence it is also called "auriculotemporal syndrome". The synkinetic mechanism for Frey's syndrome supposes an aberrant regeneration of the parasympathetic fibers because they normally innervate the parotid gland and, after losing their parotid targets, they regenerate to innervate the facial skin vessels and sweat glands. As a consequence, this results in a local vasodilatation (gustatory flushing) and localized sweating (gustatory sweating) of the sympathetically void skin in response to mastication and salivation (Drummond PD, 2002; Rustemeyer J et al., 2008; Neumann A e al., 2011; Gardner WJ et al., 1956). The etiology may be traumatic (parotidectomy, abscess drainage, bullet wound) (Rouyer J., 1959; Botkin S., 1875) or nontraumatic (autonomic neuropathy in diabetes mellitus, herpes zoster infection, metabolic diseases, etc.) (New GB, 1922). The most frequent etiologic factor is undoubtedly the parotidectomy. Parotid gland tumors are among the most common neoplasms in the head and neck region, and a variable portion (Linder TE et al., 1997; Bussu F et al., 2011; May JS, 1989). Ranging from 17% up to 100% of patients who underwent parotidectomy are affected by Frey's syndrome, depending whether or not they performed specific test. Grossly half of them notice symptoms and feel the gustatory sweating. Around 13-23% of patients consider their symptoms troublesome and severe (Laskawi RT et al., 1996; May JS, 1989). Potential negative social and psychologic implications of this condition can be significant, and treatment ranging from topical agents (glycopyrrolate) to local injections of botulinum toxin (Botox) to surgical intervention (i.e. temporoparietal fascia flap interposition) should be offered to patients (Hays LL, 1982). Moreover the Frey's syndrome, in addition to the gustatory sweating and flushing almost constant with a variable severity, can be associated with other atypical symptoms. The sensation of heat, itch and pain in the distribution of the auriculotemporal nerve were not mentioned as accompanying symptoms in the original description of the syndrome by Frey (Frey L., 1923). The pain is an uncommon finding, reported in less than 10% of cases (Bednarek J et al., 1976). It can be an early symptom and may remain the only one. Usually described as constant aching or burning, De Benedettis et al. (1990) reported two cases in which pain was the predominant symptom. Gustatory itch was described anecdotally by Ricks et al. (2010) as a sequela of superficial parotidectomy; a neurophysiological pathway involving acetylcoline and histamine has been proposed to explain this phenomenon. It cannot be ruled out that the presence of pain and itch is under-reported in the literature because they are generally not predominant, and the patient is often not specifically asked about. A systematic comprehensive assessment of Frey related complaints is currently missing. Most studies describe a single manifestation or the predominant ones basing simply on the absence or presence of symptoms and signs (Jansen S et al., 2017) without a graduation of them. Study design and setting This will be a no-profit observational cross-sectional pilot study. Patients addressed to the Otolaryngology Unit of our Institution with a diagnosis of Frey syndrome will be consecutively enrolled, if matching inclusion criteria. The expected duration of the study will be two years. Objectives. Primary.
- - To describe the prevalence of typical and atypical signs and symptoms of Frey's
syndrome, the affected areas and the severity of each symptom/sign Secondary.
- To describe the global severity of the Frey's syndrome in the group of the study; - To describe the severity of Frey's syndrome in relation to the history data (etiology, age, sex, comorbidities, surgical procedure, age of onset)Contact a Trial Team
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International Sites
Status
Recruiting
Address
Maria Raffaella Marchese
Roma, , 00198
Site Contact
Maria Raffaella Marchese
[email protected]
3391144556
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