| Literature DB >> 26329729 |
Matthew J Allsop1, Maureen Twiddy2, Hilary Grant2, Carolyn Czoski-Murray2, Mark Mon-Williams3, Faisal Mushtaq3, Nick Phillips4, Joanna M Zakrzewska5, Sue Pavitt6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is a serious health problem, causing brief, recurrent episodes of stabbing or burning facial pain, which patients describe as feeling like an electric shock. The consequences of living with the condition are severe. There is currently no cure for TN and management of the condition can be complex, often delayed by misdiagnosis. Patients' qualitative experiential accounts of TN have not been reported in the literature. Capturing subjective experiences can be used to inform the impact of the condition on quality of life and may contribute to a better understanding of current clinical practice with the aim of improving patient care.Entities:
Keywords: Management; Medication; Qualitative research; Surgery; Trigeminal neuralgia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26329729 PMCID: PMC4604507 DOI: 10.1007/s00701-015-2515-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurochir (Wien) ISSN: 0001-6268 Impact factor: 2.216
Surgical treatments for trigeminal neuralgia
Overview of participant demographics and treatment history
| Demographics | Treatment history | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Current drug management | Previous surgical procedures | ||||||||||||
| Focus group | Participant | Sex | Age | Year of diagnosis | C | G | T | P | L | Other | GK | MD | PM |
| 1 | 1 | M | 68 | 2009 |
| X | X | ||||||
| 2 | F | 65 | 1998 | O | O | X | |||||||
| 2 | 3 | F |
| 1996 | O |
| |||||||
| 4 | F | 79 | 1998 | XX | |||||||||
| 5 | F | 45 | 2004 | O | Pa; I | X | |||||||
| 6 | F | 77 | 2007 | O | O | XX | |||||||
| 3 | 7 | F | 70 | 1997 | O | O | XX | ||||||
| 8 | M | 66 | 2011 | X | X | ||||||||
| 9* | M | 60 | 2011 |
|
| ||||||||
| 10 | F | 70 | 1999 |
| X | ||||||||
| 11* | F | 79 | 1988 | O | O | X | XXXXXX | ||||||
| 4 | 12 | F | 54 | 2011 | X | ||||||||
| 13 | F | 70 | 2011 | X | X | ||||||||
| 14 | M | 67 | 2010 | X | X | ||||||||
| 15 | F | 72 | 2011 | XX | |||||||||
| 16 | M | 74 | 2007 |
| |||||||||
Participant:
* = participant has multiple sclerosis
+ = participants did not want to provide this information
O = participant reported current medication at time of focus group
X = each ‘X’ represents completion of procedure. Multiple use indicates number of times procedure was completed
Medical management:
C carbamazepine, G gabapentin, T tramadol, P pregabalin, L lamotrigine, Pa paracetamol, I ibuprofen
Surgical management:
Gamma knife (GM) = stereotactic radiosurgery using the gamma knife; microvascular decompression (MD) = microvascular decompression involving a craniectomy; percutaneous methods (PM) = radiofrequency thermocoagulation, glycerol rhizolysis, balloon compression, or local avulsion and cryotherapy of the peripheral branches
Quotations extracted from transcripts
| Theme | Reference | Text, participant, and participant sex (three dots (…) indicate that text has been omitted) |
|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis and support with TN | 1 | I started about 10 years ago, the first 2 years they were diagnosing me with sinus problems. FG3, female |
| 2 | I had all my fillings taken out and put back in and teeth taken out… I had Botox… no results at all until they suddenly decided that it was TN… FG2, female | |
| 3 | I could lie down and go to sleep now; it’s a real problem of fighting the tiredness all day long. FG3, male | |
| 4 | When you’re in that pain, you know, your life is just wiped out… FG3, female | |
| 5 | …once you start getting low like that, when the tears start, it’s very hard to come out of it because you’re on a spiral down… FG2, female | |
| 6 | It’s like....I always feel …I’ve got a demon sitting on my shoulder (laughter)… What have I done?…It’s as if somebody has just hit you in the face for no reason whatsoever and you just want to hit back, you know. FG4, female | |
| 7 | To me, it’s like someone had a knife and just kept going [stabbing] in to part of my face all the time. … I didn’t have minutes of the day when it wasn’t there. FG2, female | |
| 8 | … anybody with TN, when it gets to the stage where they[we] can’t talk, we need to see a [consultant] surgeon as quickly as possible… FG1, female | |
| Living in fear of TN pain | 9 | I don’t clean my teeth a lot because I’m scared to death of setting it [the pain] off. FG3, male |
| 10 | I couldn’t lie down, the covers touching [the face] set it off, so I didn’t sleep or I had to sleep in an upright position. FG2, female | |
| 11 | I’m in pain with it, but I have to keep going, otherwise I’m giving in to it… FG4, female | |
| 12 | I lost two stones because I couldn’t eat; I used to live on Maltesers and full cream milk…that was my diet. I could put Maltesers in my mouth and slowly let them dissolve… FG1, male | |
| 13 | …a couple of whiskies …that seemed to make the medication work better… FG3, female | |
| 14 | I couldn’t even have my tea in front of my children or my husband because I felt I looked like a freak. …you’re in pain and feel like you’re contorted. FG2, female | |
| Isolation and social withdrawal | 15 | I just got a personality change and was very sort of serious and quiet, I can’t explain it, all my friends noticed… I was like a zombie. FG3, female |
| 16 | I wouldn’t do social things, in case it [the pain] started while I was out… FG2, female | |
| 17 | If I couldn’t get the pills I would commit suicide. FG3, male | |
| 18 | I would probably have put a bullet through my brains because the pain was so intense. FG2, female | |
| 19 | Imagine, it’s your daughter’s … birthday party, you can’t speak, and you can’t eat, every time you try to speak [it’s like] someone smacks you straight in the mouth… so you’re not going to go are you? FG1, male | |
| 20 | I used to pick up my grandchildren and give them a bear hug, but because the pain gradually got worse over the years, I had to stop doing it, and that definitely put a distance between us. FG3, female | |
| Medication burden and looking for a cure | 21 | I was relying on those drugs because I believed it was taking some of the pain away and was scared to come off them, in case it was, but still I was in severe pain… too many drugs and still in pain. FG2, female |
| 22 | I’m taking amitriptyline and pregabalin and I had gabapentin before that and co-codomol but they don’t do anything, it’s [pain] just there all the time… FG3, female | |
| 23 | Well I actually overdose on gabapentin and I take 1200 mg three times a day plus… when you’re in that pain you’ll take anything. FG3, male | |
| 24 | I’ve done maximum, you know, …couldn’t bear it anymore, and I have actually I must admit, I have…carbamazepine, actually, and pain killers … I had it so bad one night… FG4, female | |
| 25 | [the doctor] said to me: “You’re toxic you’ve got far too much carbamazepine in you… I’d also started with eczema, which the dermatologist thought was …a reaction to the carbamazepine. FG2, female | |
| 26 | Yes, that [Tegretol retard] did inflame my liver; I was really poor with it, so I came off of it quite quickly and then, of course, I was in agony because I was in-between pills… FG3, female | |
| 27 | When I go onto the drugs it normally gets rid of the pain … [but] the drugs exacerbate all my MS [multiple sclerosis] symptoms… so, If I’m on a preventive dose I don’t go out of the house, if I’m on the medication, I’m stuck there. FG4, female | |
| 28 | … I stopped taking them [the tablets] like that, I suffered for it, but… I thought: “I’m sick of taking tablets…” Taking that many tablets you forget whether you’ve taken them or not. So I came straight off them… FG1, male | |
| 29 | I gave up doing gas work, I couldn’t guarantee that I could concentrate on it enough to do it… I chopped [off] the ends of three fingers, I wasn’t concentrating … I was thinking about the pain instead of what I was doing… FG3, male | |
| 30 | I had people accusing me of being a “druggie”…work colleagues saying: “there’s nothing wrong with you, you’re just a druggie”, you’re on drugs… FG2, female | |
| 31 | I just couldn’t keep up, my reactions had slowed down… it would feel as if I were being pushed out, so I just gave my notice. FG1, female | |
| 32 | I did run into the back of three cars while driving… I shouldn’t have been driving but I was reluctant to give up work and work involved travel. FG2, female | |
| 33 | I couldn’t calculate, I lost my mental arithmetic, it disappeared I just could not think…So yeah it did affect me…FG3, female | |
| 34 | Simple everyday things like that I should have known had just gone and it didn’t matter how I tried I just couldn’t bring them back. FG2, female | |
| 35 | I have a feeling of swaying all the time, as if I was going to sort of fall over in slow motion… FG3, female | |
| 36 | I’m sort of not connecting between my brain and what I’m doing, and sometimes I can write and think…no problem, other times I can’t… FG1, female | |
| 37 | …surgery, it was never mentioned for me when it [the pain] was bad…when I was kind of drug-controlled. FG2, female | |
| 38 | I just wanted to cut down on the medication… it [surgery] did that… It got rid of the pain… it’s just uncomfortable now. I can live with uncomfortable. FG2, female | |
| 39 | …once I had this done, it was wonderful, all the pain had gone I was back to normal, it’s really really nice… when you can’t, talk, eat, socialize, it takes a lot way from you.. FG1, male |