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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The results of treating trigeminal neuralgia with percutaneous retroganglionic glycerol rhizotomy in 319 patients from an overall series of 394 patients with 459 operations carried out over a period of 5 1/2 years are reported. Idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia was the diagnosis in 252 patients. 34 patients had trigeminal neuralgia associated with multiple sclerosis. The remaining 33 patients suffered from symptomatic trigeminal neuralgia or atypical facial pain. 230 patients (91.3%) with idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia and 30 patients (88.2%) with multiple sclerosis reported complete freedom from pain. In 12 patients (4.8%) of those with tic douloureux and in 1 patient (2.9%) with multiple sclerosis, pain was alleviated, and the patients required a reduced pharmacotherapy. 10 patients (3.9%) and 3 patients (8.8%) were considered to be treatment failures. The rate of recurrences within the first 2 years was 10.9 and 40.0%, respectively. In the long-term, the rate of recurrences in patients with tic douloureux was 36.9%. 144 patients (45.1%) noticed a hypesthesia. 132 patients (41.4%) had hypalgesia following the procedure, and there was a decrease of symptoms in the long-term observation in 20.0% of the patients. 59 patients (18.5%) developed dysesthesia postoperatively which regressed only to an inappreciable extent in the long-term course. In 16 patients (5.0%) exclusively with a preexisting organic lesion or who had received surgical pretreatment, there was a loss of corneal sensation. The investigation showed on the one hand the effectiveness of the method, but on the other hand also the possibility of marked sensory disorder in selected cases.
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PMID:Five-and-a-half years' experience with percutaneous retrogasserian glycerol rhizotomy in treatment of trigeminal neuralgia. 350 39

Glycerol-impregnated chromic catgut and untreated chromic catgut were compared in a randomized controlled trial involving 737 consecutive women who required repair of perineal trauma following spontaneous vaginal delivery. Medical staff preference was equally divided between the two materials. More untreated chromic catgut sutures required removal both by 10 days and by 3 months postpartum. Women whose perineal trauma was repaired with glycerol-impregnated chromic catgut were 10% more likely to have perineal pain at 10 days and 33% more likely to suffer from dyspareunia in the 3 months following delivery. The high rates of maternal morbidity associated with glycerol-impregnated chromic catgut appear to preclude its use for perineal repair.
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PMID:A randomized comparison of glycerol-impregnated chromic catgut with untreated chromic catgut for the repair of perineal trauma. 351 87

Bilateral trigeminal neuralgia occurred in 32 (11.9%) of 269 consecutive patients who were treated with radiofrequency electrocoagulation (RFE). This is a higher incidence than has been reported before and may be explained by the prospective nature of the present study, the long follow-up period, and the inclusion of patients with mild bilateral symptoms. Multiple sclerosis is the most common predisposing factor and occurred in 18% of those with bilateral trigeminal neuralgia. Although patients with bilateral trigeminal neuralgia were more likely to have had prior surgery than those with unilateral neuralgia, they did not have a higher recurrence rate following treatment. Percutaneous RFE of the retrogasserian rootlets and gasserian ganglion, with or without glycerol, is effective in managing patients whose pain is intractable to medical therapy. The preservation of most trigeminal sensory and motor functions, the low morbidity rate, and the ability to repeat the procedure are particularly advantageous for patients with bilateral involvement.
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PMID:Bilateral trigeminal neuralgia. 359 70

Autotomy in nerve injured rats has been put forward as an animal model in a broad range of chronic neuralgic pain. We have examined the effect of glycerol, a new and promising therapeutic agent for trigeminal neuralgia, on this animal model. A single dose of glycerol, alcohol or saline was injected directly into experimental sciatic nerve neuromas in rats via a chronically implanted cannula. Injections were made either at the time of nerve injury or 2 weeks afterwards. Both forms of glycerol treatment caused a significant reduction in autotomy behavior relative to saline. Alcohol also suppressed autotomy, but it was less effective than glycerol.
Pain 1986 Jul
PMID:The effect of glycerol on autotomy. An experimental model of neuralgia pain. 373 32

The mechanism by which glycerol abolishes the pain of tic douloureux with minimal trigeminal deafferentation remains unknown. To study the action of glycerol, ten cats underwent unilateral retrogasserian injection of anhydrous glycerol. The contralateral (control) side was injected with saline. Glycerol injection increased the average latencies and reduced the average amplitudes of trigeminal brain-stem evoked potentials. Histopathologic examination disclosed focal demyelination, axonal swelling, endoneurial fibrosis, and neuronal loss. Evoked potentials were severely altered or abolished in cats with axonal damage in the maxillary portion of the postganglionic nerve. Glycerol injection into the trigeminal nerve damages axons and myelin sheaths. We believe that relief of tic douloureux after glycerol injection most likely results from further destruction of the abnormally myelinated fibers implicated in the etiology of trigeminal neuralgia.
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PMID:Experimental trigeminal glycerol injection. Electrophysiologic and morphologic effects. 397 42

Twenty nine patients with trigeminal neuralgia were treated by retrogasserian glycerol injection method. Two of 29 were postherpetic and 27 were idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia. The mean age of these 27 was 65.2 years old ranging from 35 to 83 and the mean duration of symptoms was 7.6 years ranging from 6 months to 25 years. As previous surgical treatment there were 9 alcohol block, 5 thermorhizotomy of the Gasserian ganglion and one microvascular decompression. Twenty-two gauge needle was introduced into the trigeminal cistern via foramen ovale under the fluoroscopic control. Before injection of glycerol trigeminal cisternography using metrizamide of 300 mgI/dl was done to ascertain whether or not the needle tip was properly placed in the cistern. Patients' neck being flexed anteriorly, pure glycerol, amounting from 0.15 to 0.6 ml, was injected into the cistern with small increments through the needle. If the needle was inserted too deeply in the cistern, it is more probable that glycerol should escape from the cistern into the posterior fossa. So it was advisable that needle tip should be placed in the bottom of the cistern. When there was no pain relief, second injection was performed usually 7 days after the first injection. Complications were as follows; dysesthesia (81%), hypertension (70%), hypalgesia and hypesthesia (48%) headache (22%), ocular dysesthesia (11%), masseter weakness (7%), hyperalgesia (7%), attack of paroxysmal pain (7%). Most of these complications subsided within 8 weeks. Dysesthesia and hypalgesia that had persisted over 8 weeks were recognized in 30% of the cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Glycerol injection method for trigeminal neuralgia]. 401 Aug 77

Eleven patients suffering from trigeminal neuralgia were treated by percutaneous glycerol trigeminal rhizolysis after visualization of the trigeminal cistern with metrizamide. In 10 of 11 cases treatment was successful and the pain disappeared. The technique of the treatment is described. This form of treatment is recommended as a successful and simple method, especially in the elderly population suffering from trigeminal neuralgia.
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PMID:Trigeminal glycerol rhizolysis in the treatment of tic douloureux. 401 41

Stress and pain induced by surgical trauma seem to be attenuated when calcium antagonists have been applied. In order to ascertain the effect of nimodipine, a new strong acting calcium channel blocker on plasma levels of various stress hormones twenty patients undergoing cardiovascular surgery where investigated in two groups. Ten patients received high-dose fentanyl anaesthesia (mean: 2,45 mg fentanyl/patient), whereas another ten patients were treated with 0,1 mg fentanyl/patient in addition to nimodipine 1,0 micrograms/kgbw X min (from onset of anaesthesia until start of extracorporeal circulation). Between the two groups were no significant differences with respect to perioperative course and postoperative demand for analgetics. Plasma levels of ACTH, somatotropin, glucose and free glycerol were markedly elevated in all patients (n = 20) intra- and postoperatively, whereas cortisol and prolactin remained unchanged. The present data suggest an additive analgesic effect of nimodipine during surgery. This phenomenon is possibly due to a blocking effect of calcium channel blockers on nociceptive nerves. The present model assumes that calcium is essential in pain perception and that decreased calcium would result in analgesia.
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PMID:[Calcium antagonists in anesthesia. Additive analgesia using nimodipine in heart surgery]. 408 64

Two cases of trigeminal neuralgia caused by arteriovenous malformation (AVM) located in cerebellopontine angle (CP angle) are presented. A 61-year-old woman has been suffered from the left 2nd and 3rd division trigeminal neuralgia, and gasserian ganglion rhizotomy did not relieve the pain. Ten days before admission the patient suddenly got right hemiparesis and left cerebellar ataxia. Bleeding of the left CP angle was noticed by computerized tomography (CT) scan and angiogram revealed AVM of the left CP angle. A 48-year-old man had right facial neuralgia for 4 years along and he received percutaneous retrogasserian glycerol rhizotomy twice, but the pain was not aleviated. Superior petrosal sinus was enhanced on conventional CT scan, and air contrast CT cisternography disclosed network shaped structure at the CP angle, which was revealed as AVM by vertebral angiography. The patient was completely relieved from the neuralgia after removal of the AVM. AVM of the CP angle that causes the trigeminal neuralgia is rare and the gasserian ganglion rhizotomy is little effective in aleviating the pain. Bleeding from AVM causes severe neurological deficits. Removal of AVM is important not only for pain relief but also for protecting bleeding. Air contrast CT cisternography is one of the safety and convenient methods to detect the AVM and other vascular anormalies resulting in trigeminal neuralgia.
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PMID:[Trigeminal neuralgia caused by arteriovenous malformation of the cerebellopontine angle--report of two cases]. 633 63

After incisional or alcoholic destruction of trigeminal posterior rootlets, constant dysesthesias of major degree referred to some part of the markedly denervated zone develop in 5 to 15% of the patients. The full severity may not appear for weeks or months. There is no allodynia or hyperpathia of the denervated zone. Bulbar trigeminal tractotomy with sparing of touch sensation produces severe dysesthesias in a tiny percentage of the patients, as does selective destruction of pain fibers by radiofrequency heating or glycerol. Spinal posterior rhizotomy elicits in less than 4% a lasting dysesthesia entirely different in temporal sequence, locus, and type of pain: (a) it tends to be maximal early after operation and to improve, (b) the spontaneous pain is accompanied by severe allodynia, and (c) the pain is usually referred beyond the margins of the insentient (rhizotomized) zone and may even be referred to the corresponding area on the opposite side. Sindou's "selective posterior rhizotomy," i.e., cutting of the small fiber lateral component of each rootlet as it enters the cord, has not given rise to dysesthesias. These do occur briefly in 50% of the cases following spinal ganglionectomy, the sensations being referred to the dermatomal segment of the ganglion in question. The secondary afferent neurons in the mesencephalic, principal, oral, and interpolar nuclei for the trigeminal posterior roots have no counterpart in the spinal cord for the spinal posterior roots. We suggest that the explanation for the fact that neither trigeminal neuralgia nor trigeminal anesthesia dolorosa have a spinal clinical counterpart is related to the as yet unexplained special functions of the elaborate trigeminal secondary afferent neuronal apparatus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Deafferentation pain after posterior rhizotomy, trauma to a limb, and herpes zoster. 651 66


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