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Trigeminal Neuralgia Treatment in Turkey

Trigeminal neuralgia is a disorder marked by severe, recurrent attacks of pain in the face lasting only seconds, described as an electric shock or a stabbing knife; it is considered one of the most severe pains known in medicine. In most patients this pain arises from a blood vessel compressing the trigeminal nerve at its exit from the brainstem. The good news is that trigeminal neuralgia has effective treatments and a significant proportion of patients are controlled with medication. When medication is insufficient or its side effects cannot be tolerated, surgical and interventional options — chiefly microvascular decompression and Gamma Knife — come into play. This page explains, openly and honestly, the treatment options for trigeminal neuralgia, which method suits whom, and realistic expectations, for patients reaching us from across Turkey and abroad.

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What Is Trigeminal Neuralgia and Where Does It Come From?

The trigeminal nerve (the fifth cranial nerve) is the main nerve carrying sensation from the face. In classic trigeminal neuralgia, most pain attacks are explained by a blood vessel (usually the superior cerebellar artery) compressing the nerve at its exit from the brainstem and damaging its protective sheath; this is called 'neurovascular compression'. The pain typically occurs on one half of the face — around the cheek, jaw or eye — triggered by chewing, talking, brushing teeth, wind or a light touch. In some patients an underlying disorder such as multiple sclerosis or, rarely, a tumour may be present; for this reason contrast-enhanced thin-slice MRI is important in diagnosis. A correct diagnosis requires distinguishing it from similar facial pains (dental pain, atypical facial pain, cluster headache), because treatment is entirely different.

Medication First: First-Line Treatment

The first step in treating trigeminal neuralgia is almost always medication. Carbamazepine and oxcarbazepine are the drugs with the best-proven efficacy in this disorder and provide marked initial relief in the great majority of patients. In some patients drugs such as baclofen, lamotrigine or gabapentin are added. However, drug treatment has limits: efficacy may decline over time, and as the dose rises side effects such as dizziness, imbalance, drowsiness and low sodium may appear. If adequate pain control cannot be achieved with medication, or side effects impair quality of life, the next step — surgical and interventional methods — is evaluated. It is wrong to stop a medication that should be continued too early; medication changes are made under a physician's supervision.

Microvascular Decompression (MVD): Surgery Addressing the Cause

Microvascular decompression is the only method that aims to directly eliminate the cause in classic trigeminal neuralgia due to neurovascular compression. Through a small craniotomy behind the ear, under the microscope, the vessel compressing the nerve near the brainstem is identified and a small cushion (usually Teflon) is placed between the nerve and the vessel to relieve the compression; the nerve is neither cut nor damaged. The greatest advantage of MVD is that, in well-selected patients, it provides high and long-lasting pain relief without leaving facial numbness. Because it is an operation performed under general anaesthesia working near the brainstem, it carries risks such as hearing loss, facial weakness and CSF leak; for this reason it is considered first especially in patients in good general health, with a long life expectancy and clear vascular compression on imaging. The procedure typically takes 2–3 hours; a hospital stay of 3–5 days and a few weeks of recovery are usual.

Gamma Knife and Percutaneous Methods

For patients who are not suitable for surgery, are of advanced age, are unsuitable for anaesthesia because of comorbidities, or who prefer not to undergo MVD, there are other options that reduce pain in a targeted way. Gamma Knife radiosurgery is an incision-free, single-session method that delivers highly focused radiation to the trigeminal nerve; relief usually begins within a few weeks to months and gives good results in suitable patients, but there is a possibility of facial numbness and pain recurring over time. Percutaneous methods (radiofrequency rhizotomy, balloon compression, glycerol injection) reach the nerve via a needle through the cheek and disrupt pain conduction; they act quickly and are preferred especially in cases due to multiple sclerosis or unsuitable for surgery, but carry the possibility of facial numbness and recurrence. Which method is appropriate is determined by the patient's age, general condition, MRI findings and preferences; there is no single 'best' method — it is chosen individually.

Risks and Realistic Expectations

In treating trigeminal neuralgia each method has its own benefits and risks, which must be discussed honestly. Drug treatment carries side effects and efficacy that declines over time; MVD carries general surgical risks and, though rare, effects on the hearing/facial nerve; Gamma Knife and percutaneous methods carry the possibility of facial numbness and recurrence of pain. In general MVD provides the longest-lasting relief in suitable patients, while Gamma Knife and percutaneous methods are less invasive but may have a higher recurrence rate. No method guarantees 'lifelong, definitive freedom from pain'; pain may recur after a time and, if needed, treatment can be repeated or the method changed. Expectations are shared openly after MRI findings and the patient's general condition have been assessed. What matters is making the correct diagnosis and choosing together the method that offers the most benefit with the least risk for the patient.

Sources

1Bendtsen L, et al. European Academy of Neurology guideline on trigeminal neuralgia. Eur J Neurol. 2019.
2Cruccu G, et al. Trigeminal neuralgia: New classification and diagnostic grading. Neurology. 2016.
3Maarbjerg S, Di Stefano G, Bendtsen L, Cruccu G. Trigeminal neuralgia - diagnosis and treatment. Cephalalgia. 2017.
4Zakrzewska JM, Linskey ME. Trigeminal neuralgia. BMJ Clin Evid. 2014.
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Frequently Asked Questions

For trigeminal neuralgia, is it surgery first or medication?

Almost always medication first. Drugs such as carbamazepine/oxcarbazepine provide marked initial relief in most patients. Surgical and interventional methods come into play when medication is insufficient or its side effects cannot be tolerated. Starting directly with surgery is not appropriate except in exceptional situations.

What is the difference between microvascular decompression (MVD) and Gamma Knife?

MVD is an operation that directly eliminates the vascular compression causing the pain and provides the longest-lasting relief in suitable patients, but it is a procedure requiring general anaesthesia. Gamma Knife is an incision-free, single-session radiation treatment; it is less invasive but its effect begins later and the recurrence rate is higher. Which is appropriate is determined by age, general condition and MRI findings.

Can the pain recur after treatment?

It can. No method guarantees lifelong, definitive freedom from pain. MVD has the lowest recurrence rate in suitable patients; Gamma Knife and percutaneous methods carry a higher chance of recurrence. If pain recurs, treatment can be repeated or a different method chosen.

I am from out of town / abroad — can you review my MRI first?

Yes. Patients reach us from across Turkey and abroad. You can send your thin-slice (trigeminal-protocol) MRI images via WhatsApp (+90 533 075 72 94) for a preliminary assessment. If appropriate, you will be invited for an examination and further imaging planned if needed.

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