| Literature DB >> 36199499 |
Yinghua Xia1,2, Gui Yu2,3, Feixiang Min1,2, Hui Xiang2, Jinqing Huang4,5, Jingxing Leng2.
Abstract
Trigeminal neuralgia is a condition confined to the trigeminal nerve, causing one or more branches of facial nerve pain. Surgical treatment options for trigeminal neuralgia include microvascular decompression(MVD), percutaneous balloon compression (PBC), radiofrequency thermocoagulation(RF), percutaneous retrogasserian glycerol rhizotomy(PRGR), gamma knife, etc. Of these treatments, PBC is increasingly being used by clinicians for trigeminal neuralgia. PBC is a simple surgical operation performed to treat trigeminal neuralgia. Owing to its advantages, PBC is favored by many clinicians. In this study, we aimed to emphasize the need to analyze the shape of the balloon, position, compression time, and pressure, as these factors can affect the efficacy of PBC. The relief of pain by balloon compression is related to the shape of the balloon on X-ray, which is the key to the operation. Owing to continued progress and advances in current imaging technologies, clinicians revealed that the precise positioning of the foramen ovale is no longer an intraoperative problem. Instead, the anatomy of Meckel's cave and the shape of the balloon must be the focus to achieve the best treatment effect. For clinicians, PBC is simple and is associated with a short operation time. PBC also has other advantages, such as low cost and immediate postoperative pain relief. The recurrence rate of pain post-PBC is low, despite the occurrence of facial numbness post-op. However, this side effect is reversible and does not affect daily life of the patient. In fact, the patient can be discharged 1-2 days after surgery. Overall, PBC can be considered as one of the preferred surgical methods for the treatment of primary trigeminal neuralgia. In this paper, we explain the main points of PBC operation in detail in terms of Meckel's cave, surgical procedure, complications, discussion of the focus and new progress, etc.Entities:
Keywords: Meckel’s cave; balloon compression; trigeminal neuralgia; trigeminocardiac reflex
Year: 2022 PMID: 36199499 PMCID: PMC9529012 DOI: 10.2147/JPR.S374433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pain Res ISSN: 1178-7090 Impact factor: 2.832
Figure 1(A) The needle penetrated the foramen ovale; (B) the puncture needle.
Figure 2(A) The clivus line; (B) the mark of the end of the balloon catheter.
Figure 3Contrast media is injected into the balloon to fill the balloon and obtain the “pear” shape.
Possible Complications in the Operation
| Complications | Cause |
|---|---|
| Facial hypesthesia | Compress to trigeminal ganglion |
| Bradycardia and hypotension | Trigeminocardiac reflex |
| Masseter weakness | Injury to motor root of trigeminal nerve |
| Injury to cranial nerves III, IV, VI | Deep and medial displacement of the needle |
| Herpes labialis | Direct mechanical injury on trigeminal ganglion neurons |
| Meningitis | The needle puncturing the oral mucosa and entering the oral cavity |
| Arterial hemorrhage | The most dangerous complications, most of which are punctured the internal carotid artery, should be stopped immediately. |
| Carotid-cavernous fistula | The cavernous sinus of the internal carotid artery injured by puncture needle or balloon |
Surgical Treatment of Other Trigeminal Neuralgia
| Surgical Treatment | Principle | Deficiency Compared with PBC |
|---|---|---|
| MVD | Pad is used to separate the trigeminal nerve from the responsible vessels | The first choice for patients with classical trigeminal neuralgia, but not all patients have neurovascular conflict |
| Gamma Knife | Radiosurgery of the trigeminal nerve root near the brainstem | The pain cannot be relieved immediately |
| RF | The trigeminal ganglion was injured by controlling the temperature | Corneal reflex is often affected, technical learning time is long |
| PRGR | Glycerol is injected into the Meckel’s cave to damage the nerve fibers that conduct pain | Facial hypoesthesia and corneal reflex are more affected than PBC and PRGR requires patients to be awake, there are many factors that may affect the effect of operation |
Abbreviations: MVD, microvascular decompression; RF, radiofrequency thermocoagulation; PRGR, percutaneous retrogasserian glycerol rhizotomy; PBC, percutaneous balloon compression; TCR, trigeminocardiac reflex.