We report our experience of intrapetrous facial nerve evaluation in 33 patients examined by three-dimensional MRI (3D-FT) with intravenous gadolinium injection. The examinations were performed by a 1 Tesla magnet, using Flash and Turbo-Flash sequences which enabled us to obtain contiguous millimetric sections and to make reconstructions in all planes. Among these 33 patients, 31 had facial palsy and 2 a facial nerve lesion without clinical signs and discovered by chance. Facial palsy had started rather abruptly in 26 cases. It was either idiopathic (n = 20) or caused by herpes zoster (n = 1), injuries (n = 2), metastasis (n = 1) and tumour (n = 1); it was concomitant with a granuloma in 1 case. Five patients seen or explored late had congenital cholesteatoma (n = 2), facial nerve neurinoma (n = 2) or persistent idiopathic facial palsy (n = 1). There was no contrast enhancement in "chronic" non tumoral facial palsy. All tumours (neurinoma, neurofibroma, metastasis) were contrast-enhanced, as were the 2 cases of traumatic palsy and the case with granuloma of the labyrinth. In acute idiopathic facial palsy (n = 20), contrast enhancement was demonstrated in 11 patients; among these, recovery was complete at 2 months in 1 case and incomplete in 9 cases; 1 patient was lost sight of. In the 9 patients without contrast enhancement, recovery was complete in 7; 2 patients were lost sight of. This study shows that minute lesions of the facial nerve can be detected with millimetric MRI T1-weighted sequences and contrast enhancement. It also suggests that contrast enhancement has some prognostic value in patients with acute idiopathic facial palsy.