Facial pain Flashcards

1
Q

What is temporomandibular joint dysfunction

A

Term for pain and discomfort around face and mandible of jaw due to muscle spasm or joint itself

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2
Q

Symtpoms of temporomandibular joint dysfunction

A

Joint stiffness, popping, clicking when chewing, pain in jaw, ear ache

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3
Q

Epidemiology of temporomandibular joint dysfunction

A

Very common, esp. in those with migraine + TTH

F>M

Requires full dental assessment to exclude structural cause

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4
Q

Clinical features of temporomandibular joint dysfunction

A
  • Jaw and facial pain
  • Pain over temporalis and masseter muscle
  • Restricted movements
  • Mandibular clicking and crepitation
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5
Q

Which cranial nerve innervates the muscles of mastication?

A

Trigeminal

Mandibular branch (V3)

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6
Q

Causes of temporomandubular joint dysfunction

A

Intra-articular: abnormal structure of joing leading to mechanical dysfunction e.g. osteoarthritis, trauma

Extra-articular: overuse of masticatory muscles (bruxism/ teeth grinding), chronic chewing leading to degenerative change

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7
Q

Diagnosis of temporomandibular joint dysfunction

A

Usually clinical

Full dental assessment needed

C-ray can show abnormal anatomy

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8
Q

Management of temporomandibular joint dysfunction

A

Explanation + reassurance

Simple analgesia

Jaw exercises

Dental splints to prevent chewing and grinding

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9
Q

What is trigeminal neuralgia?

A

Severe facial pain

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10
Q

Discuss the trigeminal nerve

A

Cranial nerve V

Trigeminal ganglion has 3 divisions

  1. V1: Opthalmic branch
  2. V2: maxillary division
  3. V3: mandibular division
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11
Q

Epidemiology of trigeminal neuralgia

A

3 per 100,000 annually

Generally affects those 40+

Incidence increases with age

Main risk factor is HTN

M>F

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12
Q

Aetiology of trigeminal neuralgia

A

Usually idiopathic

Can occurur due to lesion of trigeminal nucleus or nerve root e.g. MS/ stroke

Compression of the nerve by the superior cerebellar artery leads to irritation and demyelination of the nerve leading to abnormal discharges

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13
Q

Clinical features of trigeminal neuralgia

A
  • Shooting, stabbing, electric shock sensation over face
  • Usually doesn;t affects V1 branch - pain felt over the V2 and V3 distribution
  • Pain short lasting but can occur in prolonged episodes
  • Patients report that they avoid sensory stimulation of that side of face e.g. not shaving or avoiding brushing teeth
  • Usually no physical signs
  • If ganglion damage there may be weakness or sensory loss
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14
Q

When to suspect trigeminal neuralgia

A

Severe, shock like pain

97% unilateral

Short lived pain

Recurrent attacks during day

Remission for weeks-months but remission periods get shorter

Pain provoked by light tough to face

Some patients have autonomic symptoms: lacrimation, rhinorrhoea, facial sweating

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15
Q

Investigations for trigeminal neuralgia

A

Examine face and oral cavity to rule out dental cause and detect abnormalities

MRI or CT to exclude nerve compression: tumours, masses, MS, epider,pid/ dermoid/ arachnoid cyst, aneurysm, AVM

Red flags: sensory change, deafness, hx of skin lesions, pain only in V1, family hx of MS, onset <40yrs

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16
Q

Management of trigeminal neuralgia

A

1st line = carbamazepine

Once pain in remission reduce dose gradually to lowest possible maintenance level or discontinue until further attack

If carbamazepine doesn’t work - refer to pain specialist

Surgery may be indicated if medication doesn’t work: gamma knife, radiofrequency ablation, decompression of dorsal root (high success rate)

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