The main symptom is facial weakness, with eyebrow sagging and difficulty closing the eye on the affected side. Patients may have many other symptoms including:
- Facial asymmetry
- Difficulty speaking
- Dribbling or drooling
- Food collecting between the cheeks and gums.
Some patients have:
- Disturbed taste (the facial nerve carries signals for taste from the anterior two thirds of the tongue)
- Dry eye
- Excessive tears on the affected side (the facial nerve carries fibres to the tear glands)
- Reduced ability to tolerate ordinary levels of noise (the facial nerve has a branch that supplies stapedius)
- Ear pain.
The weakness is initially progressive, reaching its maximum within a few weeks or less. Most patients recover over three to six months.