Abstract

To explore the usefulness of magnetic resonance neurography (MRN) in the diagnosis and management of trigeminal neuralgia (TN). In total, 55 patients clinically diagnosed with TN were imaged with 3.0-T magnetic resonance imaging. Images were reconstructed to show the full course of the trigeminal nerve. Clinical findings included mean duration of symptoms (41.99 months) and mean visual analog scale pain intensity (5.98). Final diagnoses were microvascular compression (19), inflammation (21), microvascular compression with inflammation (5), normal (5), tumor (1), peripheral nerve injury (2), and multiple sclerosis (2). MRN had substantial impact on diagnosis and treatment in 56.4% of cases. A total of 33 patients underwent intervention for pain. MRN had substantial impact on 54.5% of the treated patients. The correlation between MRN results and intervention response was excellent in 19 patients (57.6%) and moderate in 14 (42.4%). Pain was reduced after surgery or interventional procedure in most cases (75.8%). MRN is suitable for the diagnosis of clinical TN with beneficial impact on diagnosis and clinical management and moderate-to-excellent correlation with intervention response. Diagnosis of TN should focus not only on microvascular compression but also on the conditions of the peripheral branches of the trigeminal nerve.

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