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Favourable prognosis of trigeminal neuralgia when enrolled in a multidisciplinary management program - a two-year prospective real-life study

Authors :
Stine Maarbjerg
Jannick Brennum
Per Rochat
Jes Olesen
Tone Bruvik Heinskou
Lars Bendtsen
Frauke Wolfram
Source :
The Journal of Headache and Pain, The Journal of Headache and Pain, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2019), Heinskou, T B, Maarbjerg, S, Wolfram, F, Rochat, P, Brennum, J, Olesen, J & Bendtsen, L 2019, ' Favourable prognosis of trigeminal neuralgia when enrolled in a multidisciplinary management program : a two-year prospective real-life study ', Journal of Headache and Pain, vol. 20, 23 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s10194-019-0973-4
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background Prognosis of medically treated trigeminal neuralgia patients is assumed to be poor, but the evidence is lacking. Thus, prospective real-life studies of medical management of trigeminal neuralgia are warranted. Methods This was an observational study. Patients were consecutively enrolled in a structured management program at a specialist centre for facial pain. Optimisation of medical treatment, physiotherapy, psychotherapy, and advice from trained nurses, were parts of the program. Medically intractable patients were referred for neurosurgery. Data-collection was prospective using standardised schemes and patient surveys. The aim was to describe the two-year outcome of medical treatment at the specialist centre. The primary outcome was a 50% reduction in the overall burden of pain according to a Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) after two years. Results A total of 186 primary TN patients were enrolled in the program of which 103 patients remained medically managed and completed the two-year follow-up. Fifty patients were treated surgically within the first two years of follow-up. Half of the medically managed patients (53 (51%)), had more than a 50% reduction in the overall burden of pain over the two-year period. The overall burden of pain on NRS decreased from mean 5.34 to 3.00, p

Details

ISSN :
11292377
Volume :
20
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The journal of headache and pain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e883093d87f9c7e760af0c048bf2e624