View clinical trials related to Trigeminal Neuralgia.
Filter by:Trigeminal neuralgia is common painful disorder in pain medicine clinics. Gasserian ganglion radiofrequency thermocoagulation is one of the treatment option in patients with trigeminal neuralgia in refractory cases. The most commonly involved branch in trigeminal neuralgia is the mandibular branch. Masseter muscle is innervated by mandibulary nerve branch of the trigeminal nerve. The radiofrequency thermocoagulation therapy is used to ablate the affected trigeminal nerve branch and some of patients complain of subjective masseter weakness after this procedure. In theoretical basis, muscles innervated by target nerve are affected from ablation procedure. In this study the primary aim is to evaluate the change of the masseter muscle thickness in patients treated by gasserian ganglion radiofrequency thermocoagulation. The results may also show possible functional effect of the procedure related with masseter muscle.
The aim of this study is to assess the feasibility of deep brain stimulation for refractory trigeminal neuralgia due to a pontine demyelinating lesion, as is usually seen in the context of multiple sclerosis. These patients usually have severe intractable facial pain and current medical and surgical options generally fail to achieve long lasting pain relief. Hoping to improve pain control in this population, the investigators of this trial propose a novel technique consisting of implanting a deep brain stimulation lead within the pontine lesion to modulate the generation of pain signals.
Trigeminal neuralgia is a type of neuropathic pain that brings great physical and psychological pressure to patients. Chronic pain can cause changes in the composition of central and peripheral body fluids, and these changes may be useful for the prediction and treatment of pain. In this study, the whole blood of patients with trigeminal neuralgia and non-chronic pain was collected, and transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) was performed to determine the peripheral transcriptome changes of trigeminal neuralgia (TN) patients. And compare the expression of neuropeptide Y (NPY) in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid of TN and non-chronic pain patients.
This study aims to evaluate the results of percutaneous radiofrequency rhizotomy and the effectiveness of microvascular decompression for the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia and Comparing between them according the different outcome parameters.
To investigate the brain activations related to TN, using fMRI, and to evaluate changes in these activations following the application of pulsed and thermal Radiofrequency lesioning to the gasserien ganglion.