The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Many therapies are available for trigeminal neuralgia (TN), from medical therapy to invasive, mininvasive and non-invasive methods. There is no a unique indication concerning the choice of treatment; we report our indications for gasserian ganglion compression with balloon by percutaneous approach.
Out of 421 patients affected by TN treated with various methods from 2004 through to 2014, we present 46 patients treated by gasserian ganglion compression with balloon catheter. Patients selected for this procedure were only those refractory to medical therapy and refractory to the other available therapies (radiofrequency, microvascular decompression, radiosurgery, glycerolization, peripheral alcoholizations): balloon compression was performed as third line therapy.
After the procedure, twenty-eight patients were classified as BNI pain intensity score grade 1, seven other as grade 2, three other as grade 3, six were classified as BNI grade 4, and in one patient no improvement of pain occurred (BNI grade 5). After an average period of follow up of 8,6 years, four cases of pain recurrence occurred.
Because balloon compression is an ablative and non-selective procedure and all three trigeminal divisions are damaged to achieve stable pain remission, the procedure was performed only in patients affected by recurrent TN refractory to the other available methods.
Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is a social disabling disease and nowadays still represents a therapeutic challenge
Based on the available literature, when medical therapy is ineffective, it is evident that the choice between the various therapeutic methods is not well established, and it depends mainly from operator’s familiarity with one or another technique and from the technological devices available in the center where the patient is referred to. We observed that only few authors
Selection of patients to perform gasserian ganglion compression with balloon catheter was based according to: interested trigeminal division, severity of neuralgia, previous treatments.
Procedure was performed in day-surgery (22 patients) and with 24 hours hospitalization (24 patients), under fluoroscopic control, in sedation without necessity of general anesthesia.
Results concerning postoperative pain were analyzed according to Barrow Neurological Institute Pain Intensity Score (
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No pain, no medications |
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Occasional pain, no medications required |
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Some pain, adequately controlled with medications |
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Some pain, not adequately controlled with medications |
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Severe pain or no pain relief |
Postoperative controls, to evaluate efficacy of the procedure, was conducted one day, 10 days and 4 weeks after treatment; after one month, if no results have been achieved, treatment was considered failed.
Procedure of gasserian ganglion compression with balloon catheter is an ablative and non-selective procedure, which has the objective to damage gasserian ganglion by compression; consequently, all three trigeminal divisions are damaged to achieve pain remission: the effect is a various degree of hypoesthesia of the entire hemifacial side.
Ten patients were affected by first division (V1) TN (
Patient | Age | Medical conditions | Lenght of clinical history (years) | Previous treatments |
1 | 66 | Good | 4,5 | PA, MVD, RS(2), |
2 | 58 | Good | 6,7 | RS, PA(2) |
3 | 78 | Poor | 7,8 | PA, RS |
4 | 89 | Poor | 12,2 | RS, PA, GLY |
5 | 88 | Poor | 10,4 | PA, RS |
6 | 72 | Poor | 9,5 | PA(2), RS |
7 | 69 | Poor | 2,7 | MVD, RS(2), PA |
8 | 86 | Poor | 8,6 | PA, RS |
9 | 69 | Poor | 8,2 | RS(2), PA |
10 | 65 | Good | 4,3 | MVD, RS, PA |
PA = peripheral alcoholization
RS = radiosurgery
MVD = microvascular decompression
GLY = glycerolization
Number in brackets indicates the total number of procedures performed in the related patient
Twelve patients were affected by second division (V2) TN (
Patient | Age | Medical conditions | Lenght of clinical history (years) | Previous treatments |
1 | 52 | Good | 4,5 | PA, MVD, RS(2), |
2 | 67 | Good | 6,7 | RS, PA(2) |
3 | 76 | Poor | 7,8 | PA, RS |
4 | 90 | Poor | 12,2 | RS, PA, GLY |
5 | 83 | Poor | 10,4 | GLY, PA, RS |
6 | 81 | Poor | 9,5 | PA(2), RS |
7 | 57 | Poor | 2,7 | MVD, RS(2), PA |
8 | 76 | Poor | 8,6 | PA(2), RS |
9 | 78 | Poor | 8,2 | GLY, RS(2), PA |
10 | 59 | Good | 4,3 | MVD, RS, PA |
11 | 90 | Poor | 9,8 | PA(2), RS |
12 | 72 | Good | 6,9 | PA, RS |
PA = peripheral alcoholization
RS = radiosurgery
MVD = microvascular decompression
GLY = glycerolization
Number in bracket indicates the total number of procedures performed in the related patient
The last 24 patients (
Patient | Age | Medical conditions | Lenght of clinical history (years) | Previous treatments |
1 | 66 | Good | 6,7 | PA(2), MVD, RS |
2 | 78 | Poor | 9,2 | PA, RS, GLY |
3 | 77 | Poor | 6,9 | GLY, PA, RS |
4 | 59 | Good | 3,6 | PA, MVD, RS(2) |
5 | 82 | Poor | 13,4 | PA(2), RS |
6 | 85 | Poor | 15,5 | GLY, PA, RS |
7 | 67 | Poor | 5 | PA, RS(2) |
8 | 73 | Good | 7,5 | PA(3), MVD, RS |
9 | 75 | Good | 8,1 | PA, MVD, RS(2) |
10 | 78 | Good | 9,4 | PA, RS |
11 | 81 | Poor | 12,1 | PA(2), RS |
12 | 80 | Poor | 15 | PA, RS |
12 | 56 | Good | 3,3 | PA, MVD, RS(2) |
14 | 73 | Good | 5,9 | PA(2), MVD, RS |
15 | 82 | Poor | 9,1 | PA, RS |
16 | 59 | Poor | 4,2 | PA, RS(2) |
17 | 61 | Good | 7,1 | PA, MVD, RS |
18 | 63 | Poor | 5,5 | PA(3), RS |
19 | 90 | Poor | 15,1 | PA, RS |
20 | 85 | Poor | 14,7 | GLY, PA, RS |
21 | 67 | Good | 5,7 | PA, MVD, RS(2) |
22 | 77 | Poor | 9 | PA , RS |
23 | 81 | Good | 7,8 | PA(2), RS |
24 | 88 | Poor | 16,7 | PA, RS |
As above reported
Under fluoroscopic control, in deep sedation without endotracheal intubation, a 4-F balloon catheter with a capacity of 0,7 ml was inserted into the foramen ovale through a 12 gauge teflon catheter guide (
Differently from other ablative techniques such as radiofrequency thermocoagulation
Out of 46 patients submitted to balloon compression, thirty-nine (84,8%) presented pain remission within one month; concerning these patients, medical therapy was suspended in 35 (BNI pain intensity score grade 1 in 28 patients, grade 2 in 7), while it was maintained with low dosage of carbamazepine and oxcarbazepine respectively in 3 and 1 patients (BNI pain intensity score grade 3). Out of the other 7 patients, six presented some pain although they continued medical therapy and they were classified as BNI pain intensity score grade 4; in the last patient we registered no pain relief (BNI pain intensity score grade 5).
Regarding hemifacial sensitivity, final result was evaluable within 1 month; in no patient complete hemifacial anesthesia was observed. Twenty-three patients presented marked hemifacial hypoesthesia after the procedure, which corresponded to immediate pain remission, and it remained unchanged during the follow-up (9,2 years) in all patients but 2 who presented recovery of facial sensitivity and recurrence of trigeminal pain after 5,4 and 7,2 years. Seventeen patients presented slight hemifacial hypoesthesia immediately after the procedure, with only slight improvement of dolorific attacks; during postoperative days (4-28 days), level of hemifacial hypoesthesia progressively increased with concomitant improvement of dolorific attacks; high grade of facial hypoesthesia remained unchanged during follow-up (7,2 years) in all patients but 2 who presented pain recurrence after 3,4 and 6,2 years, at the same time with recovery of hemifacial sensitivity. Five other patients presented only slight hemifacial hypoesthesia after the procedure, immediate after the procedure in 3 cases and after a period of 18 and 29 days in the other 2 cases respectively; all these patients presented only minimal result concerning pain control (classified as grade 4 of BNI pain intensity score). The last patient in whom no hypoesthesia was achieved, presented no result concerning pain control: both facial sensitivity, and trigeminal pain remained unchanged (BNI grade 5)
After an average period of follow up of 8,6 years after procedure, we observed 4 cases of pain recurrence; in all these patients, recurrence of pain corresponded to recovery of facial sensitivity. Recurrence was not related to the previous BNI pain score intensity after first procedure of ganglion compression. Three of them were treated with new procedure of balloon compression, achieving a satisfactory level of hemifacial hypoesthesia and remission of pain. In the last patient, originally affected by first and second divisions TN, presenting recurrence of the only second division TN, the same procedure was attempted, but it was not possible to insert the balloon into the Meckel cave, probably because of fibrosis due to the previous procedure; the patient was then treated with surgical infraorbital (maxillary) nerve avulsion.
The main problem concerning the treatment of trigeminal neuralgia refractory to medical therapy is the following: it is better to select percutaneous mininvasive therapy which present a very low rate of complicances, a very high rate of pain control but facial sensitive deficit? Or to select major interventions, which present major rate of complicances, but high rate of success with facial sensitivity sparing? Or it is better to employ non invasive therapy (radiosurgery), with ineligible rate of risk/complicances, very high rate of facial sensitivity sparing but inferior rate of pain control than the other procedures? We retain that there is no answer to this question, therefore patients should be carefully selected for any kind of therapy, avoiding to perform one or another procedure according only to operator familiarity with one single procedure. Therefore, because balloon compression is a non selective procedure which operates compressing the entire ganglion producing damage to all three trigeminal divisions (with consequent entire hemifacial hypoesthesia), it was never used by us as first therapeutic method to treat TN refractory to medical therapy, but it was employed only for recurrence after other previous therapies.
Concerning balloon compression, only few authors
Putting in relationship the level of hemifacial hypoesthesia and the level of postoperative pain remission, we observed that the best results were achieved in patients presenting postoperative high degree of hypoesthesia (BNI 1 e 2) as observed in our previous series of patients treated with other ablative percutaneous procedures
The period of time necessary to produce hypoesthesia, variable from immediate postoperative period to 28 days in our experience, did not result a significant prognostic factor concerning postoperative control of pain or concerning pain recurrence.
Only one patient presented intolerance to hemifacial hypoesthesia, while the other accepted without any problem the sensitive deficit necessary to achieve pain remission. This is a very important aspect that proves that a strict selection of patients and clear preoperative explanation of the procedure and its effects is necessary.
Reason because different hypoesthesia is achieved in different patients, mainly concerns position of the balloon into the Meckel cave and overall the atrophic or non-atrophic condition of the ganglion; in other words, when ganglion is atrophic, Meckel cave is in part empty, as it occurs for example in “empty sella”, and compression with balloon is less efficacious because of the empty space.
Ganglion compression causes ischemic damage and this fact leads to pain remission. Differently from radiofrequency thermocoagulation in which pain remission is immediate and related to immediate postoperative anesthesia/hypoesthesia in V3, balloon compression caused hemifacial sensitivity modifications until 28 days after the procedure in not few patients (seventeen) of our series compared to the immediate postoperative result. This is a clear indication that ischemic lesion occurred progressively after balloon compression in several patients.
In conclusion,percutaneous gasserian ganglion balloon compression resulted a safe and efficacy procedure. Because this is an ablative and non-selective procedure and all three trigeminal divisions are damaged to achieve stable pain remission, the procedure was performed only in patients affected by recurrent TN refractory to the other available methods.