Surgical treatment of Trigeminal Neuralgia
Patients with medically intractable trigeminal neuralgia
characterized by paroxysmal, triggered, trigeminally distributed pain
are excellent candidates for neurosurgical intervention, which can not
only relieve the pain of trigeminal neuralgia, but also eliminate the
unpleasant side effects of medicines used to treat it. The two major
neurosurgical choices are percutaneous denervation and microvascular
decompression (MVD). Percutaneous denervation is done best when the
surgeon has available radiofrequency and glycerol and uses one, the
other, or both depending on technical circumstances that pertain to each
patient. The percutaneous denervation is less likely than MVD to cause
death, stroke, facial weakness, or hearing loss, but more likely to be
associated with recurrence or dysesthesias. Patients with multiple
sclerosis, medical illness, or who are elderly are much better
candidates for percutaneous denervation. For any patient, a number of
other factors also must be considered before deciding on a particular
procedure. These include response to previous interventions, ability to
tolerate carbamazepine, risk tolerance for various complications,
preference regarding duration of hospital stay and postoperative
recovery, presence of pain outside the trigeminal distribution, and
findings on a high resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan.
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