Cranial Neuralgias Flashcards

1
Q

What is neuralgia?

A
  • Intense stabbing pain
  • Pain usually brief but may be severe
  • Pain extends along course of the affected nerve
  • Usually caused by irritation of or damage to nerve
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2
Q

What nerves can be included in cranial neuralgias?

A
  • Trigeminal CN V
  • Glossopharyngeal CN IX
  • Vagus CN X
  • Nervus intermedia (part of facial nerve CN VII)
  • Occipital
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3
Q

What is the Incidence of Trigeminal neuralgia?

A
  • F:M 6:3
  • Usually elderly pt (60s or above )
  • 4 in 100 000 people per year
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4
Q

What is Trigeminal neuralgia?

A
  • A sudden usually unilateral severe brief stabbing recurrent episode of pain in the distribution of one or more branches of the trigeminal nerve
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5
Q

What are the classifications of TN?

A
  • Idiopathic
  • Classic
  • Secondary
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6
Q

What is the clinical presentation of TN?

A
  • Stabbing, paroxysmal, reminiscent of electric shock or burning limited to area innervated by one or more branches of trigeminal nerves
  • Each episode of pain followed by refractory period lasting few seconds to several mins
  • Mask like face
  • No obvious precipitating pathology
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7
Q

Give some triggers for TN

A
  • Slight touch to face
  • Toothbrushing
  • Activation if masticatory muscles and facial during speech or feeding
  • Even slight wind breeze or cold
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8
Q

What is the pathophysiology of Classic TN?

A
  • Neurovascular compression mostly the superior cerebelalr artery of the trigeminal nerve roots into the pons
  • Compression results in demyelination of nerve fibres leading to ectopic firing
  • Compression leads to nerve root atrophy or displacement
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9
Q

What causes secondary TN?

A
  • Ass with underlying disease such as MS , Space occupying lesion, connective tissue disease, arteriovenous malformation
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10
Q

State the order of what branches are affected in TN with most affected at the start

A

Only one either max or mand > both max and mand > opthalmic

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11
Q

Give some TN red flags

A
  • Younger pt >40yrs
  • Sensory deficit in facial region like hearing loss (acoustic neruoma)
  • Other cranial nerve lesions

Test cranial nerve
MRI

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12
Q

What is the first line drug therapy for TN?

A
  • Carbamazepine
  • Oxcarbazepine
  • Lamotrigine (slow onset of action)
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13
Q

What is the second line drug therapy for TN?

A
  • Gabapentin
  • Pregablin
  • Phenytoin
  • Baclofen
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14
Q

What are the side effects of carbamazepine?

A
  • Thrombocytopenia
  • Neutropenia
  • Pancytopenia
  • Electrolyte imbalances
  • Paraesthesia
  • Vestibular problems
  • Liver toxicity
  • Skin reactions
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15
Q

What are the surgery indications for pts with TN?

A
  • When approaching max tolerable medical management
  • Younger pt with sig drug use (as will have many years of drug use)
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16
Q

What are the surgical options for TN?

A
  • Microvascular decompression (MVD)
  • Destructive central procedures like balloon compression
  • Stereotactic radiosurgery using a gamma knife to kill trigeminal nerve cells
  • Destructive peripheral neurectomies
17
Q

What are some complications after surgery of TN?

A

Sensory loss of
- Corneal reflex
- General sensation
- Hearing loss

Motor deficits

Reversible or irreversible

18
Q

What are some causes of painful trigeminal neuropathy? (Not TN)

A
  • Herpes Zoster Virus (post herpetic neuralgia
  • Trauma (can present <6months of traumatic event
  • Idiopathic
19
Q

What are the characteristics of painful trigeminal neuropathy?

A
  • Pain localised to distribution of trigeminal nerve
  • Burning or squeezing or pins and needles
  • Continuous or near continuous pain
  • Accompanied with clinically evident cutaneous allodynia (pain from stimulus not usually painful)
20
Q

Name some trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias

A
  • Cluster headache
  • Paroxysmal hemicrania
  • SUNCT
21
Q

Describe a cluster headache attack

A
  • Pain mainly orbital and temporal region
  • Unilateral
  • Rapid onset and can last 15mins to 3 hrs
  • Rapid cessation of pian
  • Excruciatingly severe (suicide headache)
  • Prominent ipsilateral autonomic symptoms
  • Migraine symptoms
22
Q

Describe the bout of cluster headaches

A
  • Attacks cluster into bouts typ 1-3 months with remission lasting 1 month
  • 1 every other day to 8 per day
  • Alcohol triggers attack in bout but not in remission
  • Attacks occur at same time each day
  • Bouts occur same time each year
23
Q

Describe paroxysmal hemicrania

A
  • Pain from orbital and temporal region
  • Attacks are unilateral
  • Rapid onset
  • Duration 2-30mins
  • Rapid cessation of pain
  • 2-40 attacks per day (no circadian rhythm ass)
  • Excruciatingly severe
  • Prominent ipsilateral autonomic symptoms
  • 10% attacks started by bending or rotating head
24
Q

What is the drug therapy for cluster headache?

A

Abortive attack:
- Subcutaneous sumatriptan 6mg or nasal zolmatriptan 5mg
- 100% oxygen 7-12 L/min via non-rebreathing mask

Abortive bout
- Occipital depomedrone / lidocaine injection
- tapering course oral prednisolone

Preventative
- Lithium
- Verapamil
- Methysergide

25
Q

What is the drug therapy of paroxysmal hemicrania?

A
  • No abortive txt
  • Prophylaxis with indomethacin
  • COX-II inhibitors , Topiramate
26
Q
A