Emilio González Martínez, Giancarlo Mattos-Piaggio, David Santamarta Gómez
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction
Microvascular decompression (MVD) is a non-ablative technique aimed at relieving pain in trigeminal neuralgia (TN) by resolving a neurovascular conflict. Despite reported high success rates, a significant percentage of patients experience therapeutic failure.
Methods
Retrospective observational study of patients with suspected TN undergoing MVD was performed with the goal of identifying factors contributing to the persistence and recurrence of pain.
Results
In the present study, 31 patients undergoing 38 MVD procedures for TN were included (7 patients underwent reoperation after the failure of the initial operation). The mean age was 58.5 years with a male predominance (58.1%). The mean duration of pain was 6.4 years, mainly affecting branches V2 and V3 (46.7%). The most frequently described neurovascular conflict was with the superior cerebellar artery (54.8%), predominantly resolved with Teflon (75.9%).
In our case series, MVD achieved pain control in 80.6% of patients at one-year post-intervention and 61.3% at the end of the follow-up period. Twelve patients experienced MVD failure: 5 cases of persistent pain and 7 cases of pain recurrence. A detailed analysis of these failures identified misdiagnosis as the reason of persistent pain in 4 patients, while inadequate surgical technique could be the cause of pain recurrence in 6 patients.
Conclusion
In our study, therapeutic failures could mainly be attributed to two factors: misdiagnosis or the use of inappropriate materials. These factors should be considered when optimizing the management of DMV in patients with NT.
期刊介绍:
Neurocirugía is the official Journal of the Spanish Society of Neurosurgery (SENEC). It is published every 2 months (6 issues per year). Neurocirugía will consider for publication, original clinical and experimental scientific works associated with neurosurgery and other related neurological sciences.
All manuscripts are submitted for review by experts in the field (peer review) and are carried out anonymously (double blind). The Journal accepts works written in Spanish or English.