1. Corneal Neurotization Using the Great Auricular Nerve for Bilateral Congenital Trigeminal Anesthesia
- Author
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Sarah F. Osborne, Alfonso Vasquez-Perez, Mehmet Manisali, Caroline L. Wilde, Rahul Jayaram, and Nicola Lau
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Trigeminal anesthesia ,genetic structures ,Sural nerve ,Corneal ulceration ,Corneal Diseases ,Cornea ,Ophthalmology ,Humans ,Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Trigeminal Nerve ,Great auricular nerve ,Nerve Transfer ,Corneal Dystrophies, Hereditary ,Medical treatment ,business.industry ,Fornix ,eye diseases ,Sclera ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Bridge (graph theory) ,Trigeminal Nerve Diseases ,Child, Preschool ,sense organs ,business - Abstract
PURPOSE The purpose of this study was to describe an indirect corneal neurotization (CN) technique for congenital bilateral trigeminal anesthesia using the greater auricular nerve (GAN) as a donor. METHOD CN was performed to preserve the integrity of the only seeing eye in a 4-year-old boy with pontine tegmental cap dysplasia and bilateral trigeminal anesthesia. He had recurrent corneal ulceration and scarring despite full medical treatment. The GAN was used as a donor, and the sural nerve was harvested and used as a bridge which was tunneled to the sub-Tenon space in the inferior fornix. The fascicles were distributed into the 4 quadrants and sutured to the sclera near the limbus. RESULT This technique resulted in providing corneal sensation and improving stability of the epithelium. Corneal opacity gradually decreased allowing significant visual improvement evidenced in the early postoperative months. CONCLUSIONS Using the GAN technique for CN bypasses trigeminal innervation and has the potential to improve corneal sensation. The GAN is a large caliber nerve and provides a large amount of axons and robust neurotization. This technique would be desirable for cases with bilateral congenital trigeminal anesthesia, such as pontine tegmental cap dysplasia.
- Published
- 2021
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