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      Trigeminal Neuralgia

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          Abstract

          Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is a sudden, severe, brief, stabbing, and recurrent pain within one or more branches of the trigeminal nerve. Type 1 as intermittent and Type 2 as constant pain represent distinct clinical, pathological, and prognostic entities. Although multiple mechanism involving peripheral pathologies at root (compression or traction), and dysfunctions of brain stem, basal ganglion, and cortical pain modulatory mechanisms could have role, neurovascular conflict is the most accepted theory. Diagnosis is essentially clinically; magnetic resonance imaging is useful to rule out secondary causes, detect pathological changes in affected root and neurovascular compression (NVC). Carbamazepine is the drug of choice; oxcarbazepine, baclofen, lamotrigine, phenytoin, and topiramate are also useful. Multidrug regimens and multidisciplinary approaches are useful in selected patients. Microvascular decompression is surgical treatment of choice in TN resistant to medical management. Patients with significant medical comorbidities, without NVC and multiple sclerosis are generally recommended to undergo gamma knife radiosurgery, percutaneous balloon compression, glycerol rhizotomy, and radiofrequency thermocoagulation procedures. Partial sensory root sectioning is indicated in negative vessel explorations during surgery and large intraneural vein. Endoscopic technique can be used alone for vascular decompression or as an adjuvant to microscope. It allows better visualization of vascular conflict and entire root from pons to ganglion including ventral aspect. The effectiveness and completeness of decompression can be assessed and new vascular conflicts that may be missed by microscope can be identified. It requires less brain retraction.

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          AAN-EFNS guidelines on trigeminal neuralgia management.

          Several issues regarding diagnosis, pharmacological treatment, and surgical treatment of trigeminal neuralgia (TN) are still unsettled. The American Academy of Neurology and the European Federation of Neurological Societies launched a joint Task Force to prepare general guidelines for the management of this condition. After systematic review of the literature the Task Force came to a series of evidence-based recommendations. In patients with TN MRI may be considered to identify patients with structural causes. The presence of trigeminal sensory deficits, bilateral involvement, and abnormal trigeminal reflexes should be considered useful to disclose symptomatic TN, whereas younger age of onset, involvement of the first division, unresponsiveness to treatment and abnormal trigeminal evoked potentials are not useful in distinguishing symptomatic from classic TN. Carbamazepine (stronger evidence) or oxcarbazepine (better tolerability) should be offered as first-line treatment for pain control. For patients with TN refractory to medical therapy early surgical therapy may be considered. Gasserian ganglion percutaneous techniques, gamma knife and microvascular decompression may be considered. Microvascular decompression may be considered over other surgical techniques to provide the longest duration of pain freedom. The role of surgery versus pharmacotherapy in the management of TN in patients with multiple sclerosis remains uncertain.
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            Gray matter volume reduction reflects chronic pain in trigeminal neuralgia.

            Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is supposedly caused by an ectatic blood vessel affecting the trigeminal nerve at the root entry zone of the brain stem. Recent evidence suggests an additional central component within trigeminal pain-processing in the pathophysiology of TN. Therefore, we aimed to identify specific brain regions possibly associated with the development or maintenance of TN using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) voxel-based morphometry (VBM). Sixty patients with classical TN were compared to 49 healthy controls. Eighteen patients had TN with concomitant constant facial pain, a condition previously described as a predictor of worse treatment outcome. We found gray matter (GM) volume reduction in TN patients compared to healthy controls in the primary somatosensory and orbitofrontal cortices, as well as the in the secondary somatosensory cortex, thalamus, insula, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), cerebellum, and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. GM volume decrease within the ACC, parahippocampus, and temporal lobe correlated with increasing disease duration in TN. There were no differences comparing patients with and without concomitant constant facial pain. No GM increase was found comparing patient subgroups with each other and with healthy controls. The observed changes probably reflect the impact of multiple, daily attacks of trigeminal pain in these patients similar to what was previously described in other chronic pain conditions and may be interpreted as adaptation mechanism to chronic pain in regard to neuronal plasticity. The ACC, parahippocampus and temporal lobe volume reduction in parallel with disease duration may point to a pivotal role of these structures in chronic pain. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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              Mechanism of trigeminal neuralgia: an ultrastructural analysis of trigeminal root specimens obtained during microvascular decompression surgery.

              Recent progress in the understanding of abnormal electrical behavior in injured sensory neurons motivated an examination, at the ultrastructural level, of trigeminal roots of patients with trigeminal neuralgia (TN). In 12 patients biopsy specimens of trigeminal root were obtained during surgery for microvascular decompression. Pathological changes in tissue included axonopathy and axonal loss, demyelination, a range of less severe myelin abnormalities (dysmyelination), residual myelin debris, and the presence of excess collagen, including condensed collagen masses in two cases. Within zones of demyelination, groups of axons were often closely apposed without an intervening glial process. Pathological characteristics of nerve fibers were clearly graded with the degrees of root compression noted at operation. Pain also occurred, however, in some patients who did not appear to have a severe compressive injury. Findings were consistent with the ignition hypothesis of TN. This model can be used to explain the major positive and negative symptoms of TN by axonopathy-induced changes in the electrical excitability of afferent axons in the trigeminal root and of neuronal somata in the trigeminal ganglion. The key pathophysiological changes include ectopic impulse discharge, spontaneous and triggered afterdischarge, and crossexcitation among neighboring afferents.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Asian J Neurosurg
                Asian J Neurosurg
                AJNS
                Asian Journal of Neurosurgery
                Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd (India )
                1793-5482
                2248-9614
                Oct-Dec 2017
                : 12
                : 4
                : 585-597
                Affiliations
                [1] Department of Neurosurgery, NSCB Medical College, Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh, India
                [1 ] Department of Radio Diagnosis and Imaging, All India Institute of Medical Science, New Delhi, India
                [2 ] Department of Radio Diagnosis and Imaging, NSCB Medical College, Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh, India
                Author notes
                Address for correspondence: Dr. Yad Ram Yadav, Department of Neurosurgery, NSCB Medical College, Jabalpur - 482 003, Madhya Pradesh, India. E-mail: yadavyr@ 123456yahoo.co.in
                Article
                AJNS-12-585
                10.4103/ajns.AJNS_67_14
                5652082
                29114270
                3e118bf7-c270-4f7f-ae6f-9918c11228ec
                Copyright: © 2017 Asian Journal of Neurosurgery

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

                History
                Categories
                Review Article

                Surgery
                cranial nerve,microvascular decompression,neurosurgical procedures/methods,route entry zone,trigeminal nerve diseases,trigeminal neuralgia,trigeminal neuralgia/surgery

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