Abstract
Objectives: To investigate the central trigeminal system in idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia (TN).Materials and methods: Short latency responses can be recorded in sternocleidomastoid (SCM) muscles after stimulation of the trigeminal nerve (trigemino-cervical reflex). This brainstem reflex was investigated in 40 healthy subjects and in 17 patients suffering from idiopathic TN before and after therapy for 2 months with carbamazepin.Results: Before therapy, six patients presented abnormalities of SCM responses on the painful side, six patients with bilateral abnormalities, and five patients with normal responses. A significant variation in the responses after therapy was found only in the patients with unilateral abnormalities: these patients and the patients with normal reflexes before therapy also had a good response to the therapy with significant pain relief.Conclusions: Our findings suggest that the trigemino-cervical reflex could be useful in the clinical assessment of TN prior to instituting non-surgical treatment. The bilateral location of the abnormalities in some patients seems to point to a centrally located dysfunction; therefore, this study supports the idea that mechanisms in the central nervous system may play an important role in the pathophysiology of trigeminal neuralgic pain.
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