Abstract

Patients with facial pain are sometimes referred for neurosurgical treatment with a poorly documented diagnosis of trigeminal neuralgia. In such cases, neurosurgery will usually not be helpful. We conducted a re-evaluation of the diagnosis in patients referred for neurosurgical treatment of presumed trigeminal neuralgia. Our objective was to find out why and how often misdiagnosis occurred. A retrospective study was done in consecutive first-time patients referred for trigeminal neuralgia to our outpatient clinic in 2019. We used five ICHD-3-based clinical criteria to verify or exclude the diagnosis. In patients where trigeminal neuralgia was excluded, we established a diagnosis for their facial pain based upon medical history and a physical examination by a neurosurgeon- often supplemented with examination by an oral surgeon. Thirty-eight patients were referred for presumed trigeminal neuralgia. Only 17 of them fulfilled the five criteria and were diagnosed with trigeminal neuralgia. In20 of the remaining 21 patients trigeminal neuralgia could be clearly excluded, while one of the patients had a periodontitis closely mimicking trigeminal neuralgia. In 14of the 21 patients we diagnosed temporomandibular dysfunction or dental conditions. MRI scans had detected low-grade neurovascular contacts in 13 of the 21 patients, a finding that was clearly overestimated by the referring neurologists in seven patients. Overdiagnosis of trigeminal neuralgia was common in patients referred for neurosurgery, mostly due to insufficient clinical evaluation combined with an overestimation of MRI-detected NVCs. The clinical diagnosis should be critically re-evaluated before recommending neurosurgery to patients referred for presumed trigeminal neuralgia.

Highlights

  • Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is a characteristic and disabling facial pain condition

  • Overdiagnosis of trigeminal neuralgia was common in patients referred for neurosurgery, mostly due to insufficient clinical evaluation combined with an overestimation of MRI-detected neurovascular contact (NVC)

  • TN overdiagnosis has been documented in general practice, but, to our knowledge, it has not been explicitly reported in neurosurgical patients even if “misdiagnosis” of TN is recognized as a problem [2, 20]

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Summary

Introduction

Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is a characteristic and disabling facial pain condition. The diagnosis is purely clinical, based on five typical and recognizable diagnostic criteria, and often straightforward [1,2,3,4,5]. Sometimes the pain syndrome can be less clear-cut. The number of differential diagnoses is legion – even in a tertiary referral clinic. With a prevalence of around 0.1% and an incidence around 4–5 per 100,000 per year, TN is rarely encountered in general neurology and very rarely in general medical or dental practice [6, 7]. A thorough diagnostic workup of referred patients is essential in order to select the right patients for neurosurgical treatment, i.e. those with the best chances to benefit from surgery

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