Trigeminal Neuralgia

  • Unilateral electric shock like pain
  • involves one or more division of Trigeminal nerve
  • over 80% caused by an aberrant loop of artery
  • Less common: acoustic neuroma, meningioma, cyst, rarely an aneurysm or avm
  • Treatment
    • Carbamazepine, (Tegretol) most studied and effective. Start 100 to 200 mg bid, up to max of 1200 mg per day
    • Oxycarbazepine (Trileptal), start 300 mg bid
    • Possibly effective: baclofen, lamotrigine, pimozide
      • baclofen 5 mg tid, upt to 60 mg per day
      • lamotrigine 25 mg qd, increase by 25 mg daily every weekly, target dose 200 mg bid. Reduce dose if patient taking valproate.
      • Pimozide, a dopamine agonist, seldom used due to potential side effects.
    • Limited data: clonazepam, gabapentin, tizanidine, valproate
    • Failed Carbamazepine: may try combination with gabapentin, lamotrigine, baclofen or tizanidine.
    • Surgical treatment
      • Microvascular decompression
        • involves craniotomy
        • initial pain relief 90%
        • pain free rates decline to about 70% in 5 years
      • Ablative procedures
facial dermatome