| Literature DB >> 35274166 |
Jörg Baldauf1, Ehab El Refaee2, Sascha Marx2, Marc Matthes2, Steffen Fleck2, Henry W S Schroeder2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Controversies regarding venous compression and trigeminal neuralgia (TN) still exist. The study demonstrates our experience for microvascular decompression (MVD) in TN caused by purely venous compression. The goal was to identify prognostic anatomical or surgical factors that may influence the outcome.Entities:
Keywords: Microvascular decompression; Trigeminal neuralgia; Vascular compression syndromes; Venous compression
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35274166 PMCID: PMC9160158 DOI: 10.1007/s00701-022-05176-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurochir (Wien) ISSN: 0001-6268 Impact factor: 2.816
Demographic data
| Number of patients | 49 |
| Age (years) | 58.4 (range 20–86) |
| Sex | |
Male Female | 15 34 |
| TN | |
typical atypical | 39 10 |
| Duration of Symptoms (years) | 7.8 (1–22) |
| Side | |
left right | 20 29 |
| Branches involved | |
V2 V3 V1 + V2 V2 + V3 V1-3 | 11 14 7 16 1 |
Fig. 1Typical venous compression (right side) resolved by microvascular decompression. A) Endoscopic view: superior petrosal vein (SPV) is separated from the trigeminal nerve (TN). Indentation to the nerve is impressively shown (white arrows). B) Microscopic view: Teflon sponge (asterix) is placed between TN and SPV. Tiny transverse crossing venous branches have been coagulated and divided. C) Endoscopic view after decompression
Fig. 2Transverse petrosal vein (TPV) crossing the trigeminal nerve (TN) close to Meckel’s cave (endoscopic images A + B). C) TN after coagulation and division of the TPV
Type of venous compression by Inoue et al. (2017)7
| Type | |
|---|---|
| A | a small TPV joins the SPV or the VCPF after neurovascular compression at the mid-cisternal portion or root entry zone of the trigeminal nerve. The TPV may pass on either side of the nerve |
| B | a small TPV enters the SPS directly, compressing the nerve around the porus |
| C | a large TPV enters the SPS directly, compressing the nerve around the porus |
| D | the SPVor VCPF adheres and compresses along the nerve |
TPV transverse pontine vein, SPV superior petrosal vein, SPS superior petrosal sinus, VCPF vein of the cerebellopontine fissure
Intraoperatively obtained anatomical/surgical features
| Number of patients | 49 |
| Trigeminal cistern | |
narrow wide | 22 27 |
| Type of venous compression by Inoue et al. (2017)7 | |
A B C D | 12 11 10 16 |
| Caliber of the vein | |
small medium large | 10 24 15 |
| Neurovascular adherence | |
yes no | 30 19 |
| Trigeminal nerve indentation | |
Yes No | 7 42 |
| Surgical procedure | |
coagulation/division transposition (Teflon) | 17 32 |
BNI score on follow-up
| BNI pain intensity score | |
| 1 (no pain, no med.) | 32 |
| 2 (occasional pain, not requiring med.) | 3 |
| 3 (some pain, adequately controlled with med.) | 6 |
| 4 (some pain, not adequately controlled with med.) | 4 |
| 5 (severe pain, no pain relief) | 4 |
| BNI facial numbness score | |
| 1 (no facial numbness) | 26 |
| 2 (mild facial numbness, not bothersome) | 13 |
| 3 (facial numbness, somewhat bothersome) | 1 |
| 4 (facial numbness, very bothersome) | 0 |
| BNI total (pain + numbness score) | |
| Excellent (2) | 20 |
| Good (3) | 14 |
| Fair (4) | 5 |
| Poor (≥ 5) | 10 |