Chapter 42 Orofacial Pain Flashcards

KEY POINTS 1. Diagnosis guides management; an algorithmic approach is necessary to treat patients with headache and facial pain. Accurate diagnosis requires knowledge of the ICHD-2 criteria, and stepwise elimination of primary and secondary headaches. 2. Red flags in the history and physical examination require further investigation. 3. Treatment centers on preventive and abortive strategies. The appropriate timing for interventional treatment needs to be measured against the severity of th

1
Q

The ICHD-2 criteria provide a systematic classification for headache and orofacial pain and are divided into three
parts:

A

the primary headaches, the secondary headaches,

and cranial neuralgias central and primary facial pain

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2
Q

before considering the

diagnoses that are commonly attributed to orofacial pain

A

it is relevant to provide a brief comment on eliciting the
key components of the history and physical examination in
the evaluation of headache and orofacial pain. It is important to take a stepwise, systematic approach to the patients pain.

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3
Q

An appropriate physical examination includes

A
a thorough neurologic assessment (including gait, pronator drift, Romberg’s sign, and reflex testing, that is, Hoffman and Babinski signs), heart and carotid auscultation, fundoscopic examination, cervical range of motion (ROM
including atlantoaxial and atlantoocciptial joint), a musculoskeletal evaluation with careful detail to myofascial
tenderness and trigger points, maneuvers that provoke
radicular signs (Spurling’s test), cervical facet examination,
and Waddell’s signs of nonorganic pain (tenderness
to palpation, stimulation, distraction, regional disturbance
in function, and overreaction).
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4
Q

The Primary Headaches

A
  1. Migraine
  2. Tension-type headache
  3. Cluster headache and other trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias
  4. Other primary headaches
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5
Q

The Secondary Headaches

A
  1. Headache attributed to head and/or neck trauma
  2. Headache attributed to cranial or cervical vascular disorder
  3. Headache attributed to nonvascular intracranial disorder
  4. Headache attributed to a substance or its withdrawal
  5. Headache attributed to infection
  6. Headache attributed to disorder of homoeostasis
  7. Headache or facial pain attributed to disorder of cranium, neck, eyes, ears, nose, sinuses, teeth, mouth, or other facial or cranial structures
  8. Headache attributed to psychiatric disorder
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6
Q

Cranial Neuralgias Central and Primary Facial Pain and Other Headaches

A
  1. Cranial neuralgias and central causes of facial pain

14. Other headache, cranial neuralgia, central or primary facial pain

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7
Q

Headache with “Red Flag” Symptoms and Signs That Require Further Work-up

A

Sudden onset of headache (thunderclap headache)
Fever, rash, and/or stiff neck (meningismus) associated with the headache
Papilledema (optic nerve head swelling)
Dizziness, unsteadiness, dysarthria, weakness, or changes in sensation (numbness or tingling) especially if profound, static, and occurring
for the first time

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8
Q

Headache with “Red Flag” Symptoms and Signs That Require Further Work-up

A

Migraine auras or other previously experienced neurologic migraine accompaniments lasting longer than 1 hr
Presence of confusion, drowsiness, or loss of consciousness
Headache is triggered by exertion, coughing, bending, or sexual activity
Headache is progressively worsening and/or resistant to treatment
Previously experienced headache characteristics or accompaniments have substantially changed
Persistent or severe vomiting accompanies the headache

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9
Q

Headache with “Red Flag” Symptoms and Signs That Require Further Work-up

A

Headaches beginning after age of 50 are associated with a higher risk of arteritis or intracranial tumors. Inquire about unexplained weight loss,
sweats, fevers, myalgia, arthralgia, and jaw claudication, which are typical accompaniments of giant cell (temporal) arteritis
Headache occurring in a patient with human immunodeficiency virus or cancer
Frequent emergency department or acute care use
Daily or near-daily use of pain relievers or the need to take more than the recommended dosage of pain relievers to control headache symptoms

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10
Q

Indications for Neuroimaging in Headaches- Urgent

A
Thunderclap headache with neurologic deficit
Headache with altered mental status or seizure
Prior intervention (if reduced intracranial compliance focal defects suspected, meningismus)
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11
Q

Indications for Neuroimaging in Headaches- Routine

A

Thunderclap headache without focal neurologic deficit
Change in headache characteristics (severity, side shift, worsening)
Headache accompanied by neurologic deficit or abnormality (disequilibrium, pronator drift, weakness, papilledema)
Headache in immunocompromised patients, cancer patients

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12
Q

The trigeminal system provides

A

the relay system for pain
and touch sensation to the face, as well as motor function
to the muscles of mastication. The trigeminal system is a
bilateral structure that spans from the midbrain to the
medulla and is composed of four nuclei: the mesencephalic
nucleus, the main sensory nucleus, a spinal nucleus of V,
and the motor nucleus.

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13
Q

The caudal portion of the trigeminal system nucleus is referred to as the spinal nucleus of V and is composed of three regions

A

in cephalad to caudal
order, the subnucleus oralis, the subnucleus interplaris,
and the subnucleus caudalis.

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14
Q

The subnucleus caudalis

A

very similar in structure and function to the dorsal horn and extends down to the second or third cervical level.

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15
Q

In the trigeminal system the primary afferent synapses

A

ipsilaterally in the nucleus caudalis and then the second-order neuron crosses
to join the contralateral spinothalamic tract.

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16
Q

The trigeminal pathway is termed the

A

ventral trigeminothalamic
tract and terminates in the ventral posteromedial (VPM)
nucleus of the thalamus.

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17
Q

Activation of nuclei in close proximity to the trigeminocervical complex may explain

A

the associated aura and symptoms attributed to different headache disorders by either activation of wide dynamic neurons, ephaptic transmission, or by sheer close proximity to the complex (solitary nucleus, nucleus ambiguous, or dorsal nucleus of vagus nerve).

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18
Q

HEADACHE ATTRIBUTED TO
DISORDER OF CRANIAL BONE
The diagnostic criteria include

A

pain in one or more
regions in the head and face with clinical, laboratory, or imaging evidence of a lesion within the cranial bone
known to be valid evidence of generating headache

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19
Q

HEADACHE ATTRIBUTED TO
DISORDER OF CRANIAL BONE
The source of the pain must be

A

in close temporal association to and is maximal over the bone lesion, and
with resolution of the pain after successful treatment of the bone lesion.

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20
Q

HEADACHE ATTRIBUTED TO
DISORDER OF NECK
These constellations of disorders involve

A

pain referral from neck structures to the head/and or face.

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21
Q

Cervicogenic headache

A

pain attributed to a disorder or

lesion within the cervical spine or soft tissues that is generally accepted to cause headache or facial pain.

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22
Q

Retropharyngeal tendonitis (also called longus colli tendonitis

A

described as either unilateral or bilateral nonpulsatile
pain in the posterior neck radiating to the occiput
or entire head accompanied by swollen prevertebral soft
tissue measuring more than 7 mm in adults anterior to
the upper cervical vertebral bodies.

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23
Q

Retropharyngeal tendonitispain is exacerbated by

A

neck extension, and less commonly with neck
rotation and swallowing. The transverse process of the
upper three vertebral bodies is tender to palpation.

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24
Q

Retropharyngeal tendonitis treatment

A

pain is alleviated within 2 weeks of treatment with antiinflammatory medications.

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25
In Retropharyngeal tendonitis Imaging studies are needed to
rule out carotid dissection and in some cases CT aspiration | of amorphous calcific material from the swollen periverterbal tissues
26
Acute retropharyngeal presents as a triad of tendinitis
neck pain, odynophagia, and fever.
27
Acute retropharyngeal tendinitis treatment is
usually conservative and includes NSAIDS or a short course of corticosteroids and it is self-limited in most cases.
28
Craniocervical dystonia (CCD) is characterized by
crampy or “tension-type pain” in the posterior neck radiating to the occiput or entire head accompanied by defective posture of the head or neck due to muscular hyperactivity.
29
Craniocervical dystonia (CCD) pain is exacerbated by
muscle contraction, movement, external pressure, or sustained posture.
30
Craniocervical dystonia (CCD) treatment
The pain resolves within 3 months of successful treatment of the underlying muscle hyperactivity. Treatment involves physical therapy, muscle relaxants, and botulinum toxin injections.
31
Craniocervical dystonia (CCD) dystonias include
pharyngeal dystonia, spasmodic torticollis, mandibular dystonia, or lingual dystonia
32
pathophysiology of Craniocervical dystonia suggest
functional defects in dopamine signaling.
33
HEADACHE ATTRIBUTED TO | RHINOSINUSITIS
This is a secondary cause of frontal headache and pain in one or more region of the face, ears, or teeth that is accompanied by clinical, radiographic, endoscopic, or laboratory evidence of acute rhinosinusitis
34
RHINOSINUSITIS Clinical causes include
purulence within the nasal cavity, nasal obstruction, new onset hyposmia/anosmia, and/or fever. The headache/facial pain onset must be congruent with the acute rhinosinusitis and must resolve within 7 days after remission or successful treatment.
35
Conditions that are not considered as causing RHINOSINUSITIS headache include
deviated septum, nasal turbinate hypertrophy, and sinus membrane atrophy.
36
Disorders of the teeth, jaws, or related structures typically cause
toothache and facial pain, and less commonly headache.
37
Acute periodontal nociceptive pain is treated with
rest (reduced mechanical stimulation), NSAIDs, topical local anesthetics, and analgesics
38
Chronic periodontal | disease is
an immune mediated inflammatory process that results in destruction of the teeth and the surrounding anchoring bone
39
Common Intraoral Causes of Oral Pain- Infections
Herpetic stomatitis Varicella zoster Candidiasis Acute necrotizing gingivostomatitis
40
Common Intraoral Causes of Oral Pain- Immune/autoimmune
``` Allergic reactions (toothpaste, mouthwashes, topical medications) Erosive lichen planus Benign mucous membrane pemphigoid Aphthous stomatitis and aphthous lesions Erythema multiforme Graft-versus-host disease ```
41
Common Intraoral Causes of Oral Pain- Traumatic and | iatrogenic injuries
``` Factitial, accidental (burns: chemical, solar, thermal) Self-destructive behaviors (rituals, obsessive behaviors) Iatrogenic (chemotherapy, radiation) ```
42
Common Intraoral Causes of Oral Pain- Neoplasia
Squamous cell carcinoma Mucoepidermoid carcinoma Adenocystic carcinoma Intracranial tumors
43
Common Intraoral Causes of Oral Pain- Neurologic
``` Burning mouth syndrome and glossodynia Neuralgias Postviral neuralgias Post-traumatic neuropathies Dyskinesias and dystonias ```
44
Common Intraoral Causes of Oral Pain- Nutritional and Metabolic
Vitamin deficiencies (B12, folate) Mineral deficiencies (iron) Diabetic neuropathy Malabsorption syndromes
45
Common Intraoral Causes of Oral Pain- Miscellaneou
``` Xerostomia, secondary to intrinsic or extrinsic conditions Referred pain from esophageal or oropharyngeal malignancy Mucositis secondary to esophageal reflux Angioedema ```
46
``` HEADACHE OR FACIAL PAIN ATTRIBUTED TO TEMPOROMANDIBULAR JOINT DISORDER This is characterized by ```
recurrent pain in one or more regions of the head/face from the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). It is precipitated by jaw movements, chewing, decreased or irregular range of motion, and TMJ tenderness that resolves within 3 months after successful treatment of TMJ disorder.
47
TEMPOROMANDIBULAR JOINT | DISORDER include
disc displacements, osteoarthritis, or joint hypermobility, rheumatoid arthritis, and can be associated with myofascial pain and headache.
48
The temporomandibular joint is a
bicondylar joint that contributes to the important functions of mastication and speech. The joint is unique in that the articular surface is covered by fibrocartilage instead of hyaline cartilage.
49
In the temporomandibular joint a fibrocartilaginous disc is located between the
condyle and and the articular fossa and separates the joint cavity into the superior ad inferior compartment
50
temporomandibular joint: Intracapsular disorders and | extracapsular disorders
Intracapsular disorders include rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis, and articular disc displacement, while extracapsular disorders include myofascial masticatory pain
51
temporomandibular joint Treatment includes
treatment of any secondary causes such as infection, treatment of somatization component (stress, anxiety), elimination of nocturnal clenching, jaw exercises, and pharmacologic therapy (muscle relaxants, neuropathic pain medications), anti-inflammatory medications). Local anesthetic/steroid and/or botolinum toxin injections may be indicated in selected cases. Surgery should be considered in patients who do not respond to conservative treatment if anatomic disruption is noted.
52
temporomandibular joint surgical treatment
The procedures include total and partial meniscectomy, disk repair, lysis of adhesions, lavage, and in rare instances total joint arthroplasty. Total TMJ replacement has a poor outcome.
53
TRIGEMINAL NEURALGIA (TIC DOULOUREUX)
a unilateral pain disorder characterized by brief painful episodes described as is typically classified as intense, sharp, and stabbing within the innervation of the one or more divisions of the trigeminal nerve.
54
Trigeminal neuralgia disorder usually starts in the
second or third divisions with the first division affected in less than 5% of the patients
55
in Trigeminal neuralgia Involvement of the first division hints towards a
postinfectious HSV.
56
in Trigeminal neuralgia the duration of the paroxysmal attack
can vary from seconds to 2 min and may be precipitated by trivial stimuli from the trigeminal nerve (such as small trigger areas in the nasolabial folds) or by stimuli remote to the trigeminal area, such as other sensory stimulation (i.e., lights, sounds, or tastes).
57
If there is a causative lesion identified, outside of vascular compression, then trigeminal neuralgia is
secondary, or “symptomatic trigeminal neuralgia.”
58
The pathogenesis of trigeminal neuralgia
caused by compression of the trigeminal root by tortuous or aberrant vessels, as identified by MRI.
59
The trigeminal nerve
the fifth cranial nerve and resides in the Meckel’s cavity posterolateral to the cavernous sinus adjacent to the sphenoid bone. Medial to the ganglion in Meckel’s cavity is the internal carotid artery, which is located in the posterior portion of the cavernous sinus
60
The ophthalmic division (V1) of the trigeminal nerve
The ophthalmic division (V1) courses in the lateral wall of the cavernous sinus and exits via the superior orbital fissure.
61
The maxillary division (V2) of the trigeminal nerve
The maxillary division (V2) exits the skull base through the foramen rotundum inferolateral to the cavernous sinus. It then enters the pteyrogopalatine fossa.
62
The manibular (V3) component of the trigeminal nerve
The manibular (V3) component courses along the base of the skull and exits the cranium via the foramen ovale.
63
Treatment of trigeminal neuralgia
Treatment centers on prevention and abortive therapy. Trigeminal neuralgia usually responds to pharmacotherapy and should be employed before interventions are attempted. Generally, after patients fail conservative treatment, young patients with MRI evidence of vascular compression should be considered for microvascular decompression. Elderly patients or those with no evidence of vascular compression may be a candidate for gamma knife or radiofrequency thermoablation.
64
Conservative treatment strategies of trigeminal neuralgia
antidepressants and antiepileptics. First-line therapy is carbamazepine or oxycarbamazepine, while second-line treatment is baclofen.
65
Interventional modes of treatment of trigeminal neuralgia
decompressive, ablative, and neuromudulatory strategies using surgical and percutaneous routes
66
Interventional Approaches to Trigeminal Neuralgia- Surgical Approaches
``` Microvascular decompression (MVD): The vessels in contact with the trigeminal root entry zone are coagulated or separated from the nerve using an inert sponge. ```
67
Interventional Approaches to Trigeminal Neuralgia- Percutaneous Approaches Gamma knife
Stereotactic radiation therapy: high dose of irradiation to a small section of the trigeminal nerve leading to nonselective damage.
68
Interventional Approaches to Trigeminal Neuralgia- Percutaneous Approaches Percutaneous balloon microcompression:
Pressure-induced ischemia. The technique may be more suitable for treatment of V1 trigeminal neuralgia of the first branch as the corneal reflex tends to remain intact
69
Interventional Approaches to Trigeminal Neuralgia- Percutaneous Approaches Percutaneous glycerol rhizolysis
Under fluoroscopy, predetermined volume of glycerol is injected for neurolysis
70
Interventional Approaches to Trigeminal Neuralgia- Percutaneous Approaches Percutaneous radiofrequency thermocoagulation
This is usually considered for the elderly patient who is high risk for surgical MVD. The outcome may be less favorable than MVD, but it is less invasive with lower morbidity and mortality rates
71
Interventional Approaches to Trigeminal Neuralgia- Percutaneous Approaches Pulsed radiofrequency ablation (RFA):
Although it would seem a safer alternative than the commonly used thermal RFA, its efficacy is questioned in a randomized controlled study.
72
Interventional Approaches to Trigeminal Neuralgia- Neuromodulation
Gasserian ganglion Neuromodulation stimulation was reported either via a subtemporal craniotomy, or a percutaneous approach
73
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia
an uncommon facial pain syndrome characterized by transient severe, sharp, stabbing pain experienced in the ear, base of tongue, tonsillar fossa, or beneath the angle of the jaw. It is unilateral in presentation, lasts for seconds to 2 min, and may be precipitated by swallowing, talking, coughing, chewing, or yawning
74
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia | The pain is transmitted via the
auricular and pharyngeal branches of the glossopharyngeal nerve, along with the auricular and pharyngeal branches of the vagus nerve.
75
If a causative lesion is identified, | then the neuralgia is
secondary, and becomes “symptomatic | glossopharyngeal neuralgia.”
76
The glossopharyngeal nerve location
exits the brain stem and descends through the base of the skull through the jugular foramen.
77
The glossopharyngeal nerve receives contributions
from the solitary nucleus, | the nucleus ambiguous, and the inferior salivatory nucleus
78
The glossopharyngeal nerve branches include
.the tympanic, stylopharyngeal, tonsillar, carotid sinus, linguinal branches, and communicating branches to the vagus nerve.
79
pathophysiology of glossopharyegnal neuralgia
Vascular impingement of the nerve roots has been implicated in the pathophysiology of glossopharyegnal neuralgia, commonly microvascular compression by the posterior cerebellar artery
80
glossopharyegnal neuralgia treatment
Treatment is primarily conservative medical management with anticonvulsants and analgesics. Refractory cases to conservative management are candidates for surgical or percutaneous treatments, including lesioning and nerve blocks.
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NERVUS INTERMEDIUS NEURALGIA (GENICULATE NEURALGIA, RAMSAY-HUNT SYNDROME)
This is a rare disorder characterized by transient bouts of pain in the internal auditory canal, not attributed to any structural lesion, and is intermittent in onset and may last for seconds to minutes.
82
NERVUS INTERMEDIUS NEURALGIA symptoms
Disorders of salivation, lacrimation, or taste can accompany the pain and are commonly associated with herpes zoster.
83
Typical cases of Ramsay-Hunt | Syndrome (RHS) demonstrate the triad of
auricular vesicles, ipsilateral facial palsy, and vestibular/cochlear symptoms.
84
nervus intermedius
part of the facial nerve (cranial nerve VII) and is located between the motor component of the facial nerve and the vestibulocochlear nerve (cranial nerve VIII).
85
nervus intermedius contains
sensory branches (external auditory meatus, floor of mouth, and palate, and mucosa of nose, and provides taste to the anterior two thirds of tongue,) and parasympathetic fibers (superior salivatory nucleus) of the facial nerve
86
nervus intermedius joins the
motor root of the facial nerve in the facial canal, at the geniculate ganglion.
87
NERVUS INTERMEDIUS NEURALGIA treatment
Conservative treatment involves the use of neuropathic | pain medications. The treatment of herpes zoster, if RHS is suspected, or surgical decompression.
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SUPERIOR LARYNGEAL NEURALGIA
This is characterized by severe pain paroxysms, lasting seconds to minutes, in the lateral aspect of the throat and submandibular region and underneath the ear, precipitated by swallowing, shouting, or turning of the head.
89
SUPERIOR LARYNGEAL NEURALGIA trigger | point
identified along the lateral aspect of the ipsilateral hyoid bone or hyothyroid membrane that is relieved by superior laryngeal nerve block, ablation, and/or resection of the superior laryngeal nerve.
90
superior laryngeal nerve
a terminal branch of the vagus nerve (cranial nerve X) and receives sympathetic input from the superior cervical ganglion. It divides into the internal and external superior laryngeal nerve (which innervates the cricothyroid muscle)
91
recurrent laryngeal | nerve
innervates all other laryngeal muscles, particularly the abductors, and when damaged can cause vocal cord paralysis (injury results in unilateral adduction of vocal cord) and bilaterally can cause airway obstruction
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NASOCILIARY NEURALGIA (CHARLIN’S NEURALGIA)
This is a transient, lancinating pain in the nostril that radiates to the medial/frontal region. It lasts seconds to hours. It is precipitated by touching the ipsilateral nostril and abolished by blockade of the nasociliary nerve
93
The nasociliary nerve
a branch of the ophthalmic nerve (V1) and enters the orbit between the lateral rectus muscles and continues obliquely beneath the superior rectus and superior oblique muscle to the medial wall of the orbital cavity.
94
nasociliary nerve terminal branches include
the posterior ethmoidal nerve, the long cilliary nerves, the infratrochlear nerve, the communicating branch of the ciliary ganglion, and the anterior ethmoidal nerve
95
SUPRAORBITAL NEURALGIA
This pain disorder is characterized by transient or constant pain in the forehead and supraorbital area supplied by the supraorbital nerve (terminal branch of the ophthalmic nerve V1). The pain can be precipitated or reproduced by pressure over the nerve in the supraorbital notch and diagnosis is confirmed by pain relief with local anesthetic blockade.
96
The terminal branches of the trigeminal nerve include the
infraorbital, | lingual, alveolar, and mental nerves
97
Occipital neuralgia
described as paroxysmal stabbing and sharp pain in the distribution of the greater or lesser occipital nerves or third occipital nerve, sometimes accompanied by paresthesia or dysesthesia or tenderness overlying the nerve that is involved.
98
Occipital neuralgia constant pain is caused by
compression, irritation or distortion of cranial nerves or upper cervical roots by structural lesions
99
Optic neuritis
described as pain behind one or both eyes accompanied by central vision impairment due to a central or paracentral scotoma
100
Optic neuritis caused by
It is not caused by compressive lesion but is thought to be due to optic nerve (CNII) inflammation. The onset of pain and visual impairment are separated by less than 1 month and the pain is self-limited with resolution within 4 weeks.
101
In Optic neuritisIf pain precedes the visual impairment by more than 4 weeks then it is classified as
“probable optic neuritis.” Optic neuritis is often a presenting manifestation of multiple sclerosis.
102
OCULAR DIABETIC NEUROPATHY
This condition is described as pain around the eye and forehead with paresis of one or more ocular cranial nerves in a patient with diabetes mellitus. Usually the pain is centered on one eye with pain developing over approximately 2 hr.
103
OCULAR DIABETIC NEUROPATHY cranial nerve paresis is
most commonly the third cranial nerve (oculomotor) and less commonly, the fourth (trochlear) and sixth (abducens) cranial nerves.
104
In OCULAR DIABETIC NEUROPATHY It is important | to rule out other causes of cranial nerve palsies, including
infection, infarction, hemorrhage, or neoplasm.
105
HEAD OR FACIAL PAIN ATTRIBUTED | TO HERPES ZOSTER
Head or facial pain can be caused by herpes zoster. The pain usually precedes the herpetic eruption by less than 7 days, and the pain is congruent with herpetic nerve eruption. Typically, pain resolves within 3 months.
106
The herpetic zoster affects what branch of the trigeminal nerve
The herpetic zoster affects the trigeminal nerve in approximately 10% of patients, with the V1 or ophthalmic division most commonly affected (80% of the time). In contrast, idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia usually affects the V2/3 distribution.
107
ophthalmic herpes can be associated with what nerve palsies
third, fourth, and six cranial nerve palsies
108
Postherpetic neuralgia (PHN)
facial pain in the distribution of the affected nerve that persists 3 months after the skin eruptions
109
The pathophysiology of acute herpes zoster correlates | with the
replication of varicella zoster virus and spread within the dorsal root or ganglion and along the peripheral sensory nerve. It may disseminate locally to adjacent structures, including the spinal cord.
110
The characteristic | dermatomal distribution of acute herpes zoster
is related to the anatomical or functional disruption of the nervous system. Necrosis of the dorsal root ganglion, the presence of the virus within the nerve elements, and atrophy of the dorsal horn characterize PHN.
111
Management of herpetic pain includes
antiviral medications. The more bioavailable medications valaciclovir and famciclovir are more effective than acyclovir in treating acute herpes zoster. The efficacy of steroid use is equivocal.
112
Neuropathic pain medications for herpetic pain
anticonvulsants (gabapentin, pregabalin) and antidepressants (amitriptyline, nortriptyline). Other medications commonly employed include topical agents (lidocaine patch), capsacin, opioids, and NMDA antagonists.
113
In extreme cases, Management of herpetic pain includes
``` Sympathetic blockade (e.g., stellate ganglion blockade) may be helpful specially if performed within the first year. some patients may resort to surgery, including cordotomy, rhizotomy, sympathetcomy, trigeminal tractomy, mesencepalotomy, retrogasserian rhizotomy, or superfical greater petrosal neurotomy ```
114
TOLOSA-HUNT SYNDROME
This syndrome is characterized by episodic orbital pain with paralysis of one or more of the third, fourth, and sixth cranial nerves that resolves spontaneously. Usually, it has a waxing and waning course.It is a painful ophthalmoplegia; the pain and paresis occur within 2 weeks of onset and resolve within 72 hr of treatment with corticosteroids.
115
TOLOSA-HUNT SYNDROME | can also involve divisions of the
trigeminal nerve, along with the facial, optic, and acoustic | nerves.
116
TOLOSA-HUNT SYNDROME It is important to carefully exclude other causes of the painful ophthalmoplegia including
inflammatory (vasculitis, sarcoid), infectious (meningitis), and endocrinologic (diabetes mellitus) causes. It may also be due to cancer (pain is due to a mass effect) or to a primary headache (migraine).
117
Central causes of facial pain include
anesthesia dolorosa, central poststroke pain, facial pain secondary to multiple sclerosis, persistent idiopathic facial pain, and burning mouth syndrome.
118
Central causes of facial pain pathophysiology
two processes have been implicated: neuritis with reduction in nerve threshold for a given painful stimulus or a reduction in inhibition from “loss of inhibition.
119
Central causes of facial pain | Characteristically, the pain complaint
The pain may be cramping, constricting, crushing, or shooting/lancinating in character. There may be a pins and needles sensation or dysethesia. Physical examination may show allodynia. Triggering stimuli include extreme temperatures and emotional distress
120
Anesthesia dolorosa
a painful anesthesia or hypesthesia in the distribution of the trigeminal, or one of its divisions, or occipital nerve. It is caused by a lesion of the relevant nerve or its central connections and is characterized as persistent pain with diminished sensory loss in the distribution of the nerve
121
Anesthesia dolorosa etiology
It is often related to surgical trauma via rhizotomy or thermocoagulation of the occipital nerve or the trigeminal ganglion
122
Anesthesia dolorosa was reported in cases after
glycerol rhizotomy and | radiofrequency rhizotomy, respectively, in the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia
123
Central poststroke pain
a unilateral pain and dysesthesia associated with loss of sensation to pinprick, touch, and temperature of the ipsilateral face. There is usually a history of symptoms suggestive of stroke, with a lesion demonstrated radiographically
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Central poststroke pain characteristics
The pain and dysesthesia develop within 6 months after the stroke, is usually persistent, and is usually attributed to a lesion of the trigeminothalamic pathway, thalamus, or thalamocortical projection. It may affect the trunk and limbs on the ipsilateral or contralateral side.
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FACIAL PAIN ATTRIBUTED TO MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
characterized by unilateral or bilateral facial pain with or without an associated dysesthesia attributed to a demyelinating lesion in the pons or trigeminothalamic pathway in patients who have multiple sclerosis.
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PERSISTENT IDIOPATHIC FACIAL PAIN | ATYPICAL FACE PAIN
facial pain that is present daily and persists for the majority of the day, but does not have features attributed to any of the other cranial neuralgias. It is confined to a poorly defined area of the face and is “deep” in location, not associated with sensory loss or other physical signs. It is not attributed to any other disorder.
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ATYPICAL FACE PAIN location
pain is commonly in the nasolabial fold or side of the chin and may spread to the upper or lower jaw with a more generalized distribution. It may be triggered by surgery or injury to the face, cheek, and gums.
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BURNING MOUTH SYNDROME
This pain is characterized by an intraoral burning sensation wherein no medical or dental etiology is demonstrated. The mouth pain is daily and persistent for most of the day. Associated symptoms include subjective dryness of the mouth, paresthesia, and altered taste