Trigeminal Neuralgia: The Worst Head Pain

Anyone who has experienced toothaches, blocked sinuses, earaches, corneal scratches or migraine headaches knows that pain arising from any part of the head can be severe. Head pain is transmitted to the brain through the fifth of twelve pairs of cranial nerves at the base of the brain, named the trigeminal nerves. The worst head pain of all is the result of one or the other of these nerves misfiring, a condition known as trigeminal neuralgia, in which hundreds of episodes a day of lightning like spasms of pain on one side of the face are triggered by trivial touch or movement or by nothing identifiable. The pain is severe enough to bring sufferers to their knees and to cause more than a few to say that if it persisted they would have to commit suicide.  The famous painting, The Scream, by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch, has been called a visual representation of the agony caused by trigeminal neuralgia.

Symptoms

Symptoms of trigeminal neuralgia are almost always one-sided.  Spasms of facial pain are brief and explosive and described as stabbing, electrical, or like being stuck with an ice pick. Episodes can last for weeks or months, and then disappear not to return, or they may return in similar fashion, without warning, months or years later. Pain bouts may also become chronic and associated with other duller, longer lasting pain in the same area of the face. Because light touch and facial movements such as chewing and talking can trigger pain, patients avoid eating, lose weight, become depressed and socially withdrawn and look disheveled from avoiding skin care and shaving.   

Why does it happen?

About 150,000 new cases of trigeminal neuralgia are diagnosed in the US every year, more often in women than men and usually over age 60. The ailment can appear in younger people, most often in conjunction with multiple sclerosis. As long ago as the eleventh century, an Arab physician, Jujani, suggested that a blood vessel in the head, near the nerve that served the face, caused spasmodic facial pain and anxiety, a prescient notion since one of the few risk factors for trigeminal neuralgia is high blood pressure. Chronic high blood pressure distorts and hardens arteries, and one of the most effective treatments of trigeminal neuralgia in modern times has been to pad the nerve, protecting it from the pounding of an overlying artery.

Bolstering Jujani’s theory, pathological examinations of trigeminal nerves have shown evidence of damage and repair to the sheaths surrounding individual nerve fibers, suggesting that pressure from a nearby artery or vein, causes intermittent, reversible damage. The association of trigeminal neuralgia with multiple sclerosis, an inflammatory disease which also causes myelin sheath damage, lends weight to the idea that stripping sensory nerve fibers of their myelin sheaths somehow causes them to be irritable and misfire. There is no specific test for trigeminal neuralgia, which can be diagnosed from the clinical history alone. However, sometimes CT and MRI scans are done to rule out tumors irritating the trigeminal nerve, or to look for evidence of demyelinating diseases like multiple sclerosis or other autoimmune problems. Spinal fluid analysis might be added a search for inflammatory or demyelinating marker proteins and cells.

Similar conditions

      Other conditions may produce shooting head pains. One is glossopharyngeal neuralgia, coming from irritation of a different cranial nerve and causing pain deep in the throat and ear. It is much rarer than trigeminal neuralgia, but medical treatments are similar. Another is occipital neuralgia which comes from compression of a nerve in the upper neck, at the base of the skull. This painful condition is associated with poor posture, trauma or arthritic changes. Occipital neuralgia presents itself as stabbing or shooting pains, as well as duller aching pain and general headaches in the back and sides of the head, and at times behind the eyes. Temporomandibular joint problems (the joint that hinges the jaw to the skull) may also cause shooting pain in the side of the face, along with jaw pain and locking.

Treatments

    The first effective treatment of trigeminal neuralgia was based on the concept of nerve cell irritability, with the use of drugs that treated seizures, first introduced in the mid-1900s. Though not perfect, these drugs continue to provide significant relief for the majority of trigeminal neuralgia sufferers. In addition, many attempts have been made to change the input of the trigeminal nerve to the brain physically by cutting it or injecting it with chemicals that deaden it. This treatment is called neuro-ablative surgery and the relief obtained is in direct proportion to the amount of numbness in the face caused by deliberately damaging the nerve. The more numbness, the better the pain relief. However, for some people, persistent facial numbness or unpleasant sensations are almost as intolerable as the pain, so numerous variations on such procedures have been tried. There are few controlled studies of outcome. Gamma knife surgery is the latest method. Symptoms recur within three years in 20-60% of patients, in inverse proportion to the amount of numbness produced by this deliberate nerve damage. 

    Microvascular decompression surgery (MVD), as mentioned above, is the most effective surgical procedure for trigeminal neuralgia. It involves opening the skull and placing a Teflon felt pad between the trigeminal nerve and the blood vessel that lies atop it, just where the nerve enters the brain stem. In experienced hands MVD produces immediate pain relief in over 90% of cases, with relief sustained for a decade or more in over 2/3 of them. Though many patients would rather try this or other surgical procedures than be dependent on anticonvulsant drugs, they must carefully weigh the risks, which are those of general anesthesia and of opening the cranial cavity, infection and damage to delicate neural structures chief among the possibilities. Procedures such as these should be done in centers where experience levels of all involved are demonstrable.

     All the pains we suffer are reminders that our exquisitely complicated pain networks exist to guard the body, particularly the head and the brain within, against damage from the environment. Like every other part of the body, the pain systems can go awry, making life very difficult, but this is nature’s trade-off since life without pain is more dangerous. In conditions like trigeminal neuralgia we are left to try to understand the cause and to intervene as best we can without causing harm.

The Headaches that Predict Catastrophe

One of the most treacherous problems a busy emergency room physician faces is headache.  “Headache” is a very common symptom, different from focal head pains attributable to sinus, eye or ear problems. While very painful and sometimes associated with nausea and vomiting,  the vast majority of headaches, even if frequent and debilitating, are benign.  They do not signify underlying illnesses or impending danger.   But the emergency physician cannot afford to be wrong about the rare headache that predicts oncoming catastrophe and provides a chance to intervene.

Two broad categories

Catastrophic headaches fall into two broad categories. The first category includes “space-occupying lesions” such as tumors, hemorrhages, abscesses, and hydrocephalus (known commonly as “water on the brain”).  The second category involves infectious and autoimmune problems that produce inflammation, triggering pain receptors in the membranes surrounding the brain and its blood vessels. Catastrophes avoided by successful interventions in both categories include death, permanent brain damage and blindness.  

Tumors and abscesses

The most common fear about a bad headache is that it is caused by a brain tumor, but tumors usually produce other symptoms, involving speech, thinking, coordination or vision before they produce headache. Since the brain tissue itself has no pain receptors, tumors cause headache when they distort surrounding membranes or blood vessels, which have pain receptors. Tumor-related headaches worsen with positions and activities that normally cause the pressure in the veins in the head to rise – coughing, sneezing, lying down, straining at a bowel movement or lifting something heavy. As tumor size and pressure increase, nausea and vomiting appear. Occasionally, brain abscesses – pockets of infection surrounded by capsules -may mimic tumors. They usually come from blood infections seeding bacterial or fungal organisms into the brain.

Hemorrhages in the brain

Brain hemorrhages occupy space and increase pressure in the head.  Deep small blood vessels, damaged by high blood pressure or arteriosclerosis, are usually the culprits. While these intracerebral hemorrhages can cause sudden headache, stroke-like symptoms such as paralysis, confusion, trouble speaking and loss of consciousness occur first or soon after the onset of headache.

Hemorrhages outside the brain, but inside the head

Headaches are also a symptom of epidural and subdural hematomas – collections of blood that accumulate over the surface of the brain hours to weeks after some closed head injuries (meaning no skull fracture). The history of injury, even seemingly trivial injury in an elderly patient,  is crucial to correct evaluation of these headaches and there may be no other accompanying neurological symptoms. A head blow in the temple, where the skull is the thinnest is a common history. Young children and older adults are more susceptible to epidural hematomas (located between the inner skull and the the dural membrane over the brain) than those in between those age groups. Both epidural and subdural (between the dural membrane and the surface of the brain) collections of blood usually require surgical removal, sometimes as an emergency if symptoms such as change in level consciousness appear. Actor Liam Neeson’s wife Natasha Richardson did not survive an epidural hematoma incurred in a skiing related fall in 2009.

The “sentinel headache” of the aneurysm

Bleeding from brain aneurysms – weak spots at branch points of arteries – can be immediately catastrophic, even causing sudden death. But a tiny, warning leak before an aneurysm actually ruptures may cause a “sentinel headache” which allows time for life-saving surgical repair to prevent the oncoming, big rupture which typically occurs sometime in the next 10 days.  A sentinel headache is sudden and severe pain involving all or part of the head, It is sometimes described like a “thunderclap.”  As the little warning squirt of blood dissipates in the spinal fluid around the base of the brain, the headache dulls but a peculiar, longer-lasting pain may appear in the middle of the upper back, usually worsened with movement and probably indicating irritation from blood in the spinal fluid around the spinal cord. Diagnosis involves brain imaging with dye to study the arteries, and possibly a spinal tap to make certain bleeding has occurred. Unruptured cerebral artery aneurysms are found incidentally in 2% of autopsies so the problem is not rare.

Hydrocephalus

Hydrocephalus is a rare cause of headache, but one that should never be overlooked. The rise in pressure in the head comes from spinal fluid being trapped in the ventricles, hollow structures in the center of the brain where spinal fluid is made. Normally the spinal fluid circulates out of the ventricles via a very small channel, and bathes the surface of the brain and spinal cord before being absorbed into special veins at the top of the head. If flow is blocked, the ventricles begin to enlarge putting pressure on the surrounding brain. Most times, the onset of hydrocephalus is gradual, with headache, nausea, vomiting and balance problems gradually increasing. Unrecognized and untreated, obstructed spinal fluid flow leads to lethargy, coma and death, within 24 hours if the obstruction is sudden. Causes of obstruction include congenital anatomical abnormalities, tumors blocking the ventricular outflow tracts, scarring of these passages by inflammation from past meningitis or bleeding. Hydrocephalus most often requires surgical intervention to either remove the obstruction or to place a shunt around it, allowing cerebrospinal fluid to escape from the ventricles.

Headache from infection

Headache producing infections mainly involve the meninges, the membranes covering the brain and the spinal cord and are caused by viruses, bacteria or fungi. Viral and bacterial meningitis both cause severe headache, neck pain and rigidity and photophobia – inability to tolerate bright light. Movements of head and trunk and even eye movements are painful. Someone suffering from bacterial meningitis has a high fever, looks extremely ill and deteriorates rapidly. Identification of the infection type requires spinal fluid, obtained via spinal tap – insertion of a large needle into the spinal canal in the low back.  Antibiotics are lifesaving. Viral meningitis, though painful, is less dramatic, and gets better on its own. Fungal meningitis is rare and much slower and less dramatic in its presentation than bacterial meningitis. It most often occurs in people who have impaired immune systems and requires prolonged treatment with antifungal drugs.

Non-infectious inflammatory headache: temporal arteritis

Headache from a non-infectious inflammatory condition called temporal arteritis usually presents itself in the seventh or eighth decade of life as a constant, often one-sided pain. Other symptoms that provide clues to this diagnosis are pain in the jaw muscle, especially with chewing, and tenderness of the artery just under the skin of the temple – the origin of the name for auto-immune inflammation that affects the arteries that supply the skull and brain with blood and can cause blindness and strokes. Diagnosis is confirmed when a blood test called ESR (erythrocyte sedimentation rate) is elevated and a temporal artery biopsy shows characteristic inflammatory cells in the artery wall. Treatment with steroids like prednisone, undertaken soon enough, prevents blindness and takes the headache away, but must be continued for many months.

A very useful question

One of the most useful questions an emergency room physician, or any other professional evaluating a headache complaint can ask the patient is “How worried are you about this headache?” People know themselves and have an innate sense about the nature of their symptoms. They will very often know the difference between a catastrophic headache and all the others.

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