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Chronic Craniofacial Pain D • An unpleasant sensory and emotional experience associated with actual or potential tissue damage , or described in terms of such damage Pain is always subjective What do we associate to? Dental and Periodontal Pathology Burning mouth syndrome Atypical facial pain (phantom tooth pain) Temporomandibular joint disorders What may we visit? Headache Syndromes Otologic Problems Ocular and Periocular Disorders Facial nueralgias What’s The Point? Successful treatment depends on making the correct diagnosis Despite all the advancements in medicine, it is not possible to cure all pain problems History Hx of present illness Past medical hx Family hx Social hx Physical examination Careful detailed pain history Location Duration Temporal characteristics Quality Severity Circumstances of onset Influencing factors Neurological symptoms Response to medications Orofacial pain (OFP) is prevalent in the general population; around 23%, of which 7%–11% is chronic. Acute OR chronic Acute OFP is primarily associated with the teeth and their supporting structures. Most frequently, dental pain is due to dental caries, although a broken filling or tooth-abrasion may also cause dental sensitivity. Other oral pains are usually periodontal or gingival in origin. Chronic orofacial pain (COFP) is a term used to describe painful regional syndromes with a chronic, unremitting pattern. Clinically COFP may be subdivided into three main symptomatic classes: 1. Neuropathic 2. Neurovascular 3. Musculoskeletal Neuropathic OFP includes a number of clinical Entities the most common are: 1. TN 2. Painful Posttraumatic Neuropathies 3. Burning Mouth Syndrome (BMS) More rarely 1. Facial Postherpetic Neuropathy 2. Central Poststroke Pain 3. Glossopharyngeal Neuralgia (GN) TN is an excruciating, short-lasting, unilateral facial pain. The most common is the classical unrelated to pathology and most probably caused by neurovascular compression of the trigeminal nerve root. In the new classification, secondary forms have been classified separately, and these are related to a variety of clear pathologies including tumors, cysts, viral infection, trauma, and systemic diseases such as multiple sclerosis. CLINICAL FEATURES Location Quality and intensity: paroxysmal, shooting, sharp, piercing, stabbing, or electrical. Pain paroxysms are usually accompanied by spasm of the ipsilateral facial muscles (hence the name tic douloureux). Typically pain is precipitated by light, innocuous touch at sites called “trigger areas.” Trigger factors such as: noise, lights, and stress may also induce pain. There are two attack-related phenomena that are particular to TN: Latency Refractory Period The glossopharyngeal (IX) nerve has two main sensory branches: 1. The Pharyngeal 2. The Auricular (Tympanic) In pharyngeal-GN, the pharynx or posterior tongue-base are involved. Pain radiates to the inner ear or the angle of the mandible, and may include the eye, nose, maxilla, or shoulder and even the tip of the tongue. In tympanic-GN, pain predominates in the ear but may radiate to the pharynx. Bilateral pain occurs in up to a quarter of patients. Rare; occurs about 1 in 170,000; average age 50. Abrupt onset, painful attacks last 30-60 seconds. Talking, chewing, swallowing, yawning, touching the tonsil may precipitate pain (trigger) May mimic TMD. Subject to remission and recurrences. Topical anesthetic tonsil/pharynx of affected side gives relief up to 90 min. • Up to one-fifth of acute HZ patients will suffer persistent pain three to six months after acute HZ. By one year however only 5%–10% suffer pain. • Advanced age (>50), severe prodromal pain (VAS>5), severe acute pain, and severe rash are risk factors for persistent pain. • In patients older than 60 years, 50% or more will continue to suffer pain for more than one year. F > M, 4-7:1; rare before age 30; 14% of post-menopausal women, 3-12 years after menopause. BMS may be subclassified into: 1. “primary” or idiopathic BMS for which a neuropathological cause is likely and cannot be attributed to any systemic or local cause 2. “secondary BMS” (SBMS) resulting from local or systemic pathological conditions. Spontaneous onset; burning of anterior third of dorsum of tongue; mild on awakening increasing during the day; altered or diminished taste; intensified by hot foods or liquids. Pain is most commonly described as burning or hot and intensity varies from mild to severe. Common aggravating factors include personal stressors, fatigue, and specific foods (acidic, hot, or spicy). Anxiety, depression or irritability are common. Oral and perioral burning sensation as a result of local or systemic factors or diseases is classified as SBMS. • Local factors and diseases known to induce SBMS include: oral candidiasis, lichen planus, and allergies. • Systemic disorders that induce SBMS include hormonal changes, deficiencies of vitamin B12, folic acid or iron, diabetes mellitus, Side effects of medications, autoimmune diseases. Some patients develop chronic pain following negligible nerve trauma such as root canal therapy or following considerable injury to nerve bundles, such as in fractures of the facial skeleton. Also known as sphenopalatine neuralgia or Horton’s syndrome. Pain in mid and upper face around eye. Attacks occur in clusters with extended periods of remission. Associated with sleep apnea; 80% are smokers; alcohol, cocaine or nitroglycerine may initiate attack. Prevalence is 1 in 10,0000; 6:1 male; most age 20-30; B > W; familial (50-fold increase). • Pain unilateral follows distribution of ophthalmic division of trigeminal nerve; may cause jaw or tooth pain. • Paroxysmal burning or lancinating pain lasting 15min to 3 hrs occurring up to 8 times/day for weeks; onset often in middle of night @ same time (alarm clock headache). • Nasal stuffiness, tearing, facial flushing and conjuctival redness. CONDITIONS ASSOCIATED WITH CLUSTER HEADACHE (HORNER’S SYNDROME) PICA syndrome (posterior inferior cerebellar artery occlusion) Trauma - base of neck, usually blunt trauma. Stroke Middle ear infection Aortic aneurysm, thoracic Neurofibromatosis type 1 Goiter Dissecting aortic aneurysm Thyroid carcinoma Bronchogenic carcinoma Multiple sclerosis Carotid artery dissection Cavernous sinus thrombosis Sympathectomy Syringomyelia Nerve blocks Common disabling paroxysmal unilateral headache. Thought to be caused by vasoconstriction or vasospasm of cerebral artery, possible due to reduced serotonin, leads to nitric oxide mediated vasodilation, with pain and edema. First onset in teenagers and young adults estimated at 21% life-time risk. Females 3:1; ages 20-40. With aura or without; throbbing pain in temporal frontal or orbital region starts mild becoming severe 30+ minutes. Can include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea photophobia, phonophobia; can mimic toothache, sinusitis and allergic rhinitis. Wide variety of drugs are useful including ergotamine, caffeine, aspirin, phenobarbital, belladonna, methergine, propranolol, nefedipine, methysergide. Most common headache syndrome Episodic < 15 days per month Chronic > 15 days per month 30 minutes to 7 days Pressing or tightening Mild to moderate pain Variable location, often bilateral Nausea and vomiting rare TTH - TREATMENT Stress management Biofeedback CTTH Abortive Stress reduction NSAIDs Posture correction ASA-caffeine-butalbital Medication rarely needed in ETTH Phenacetin Preventative Benzodiazepines Antidepressants amitriptyline Muscle relaxants NSAIDs Multifocal vasculitis of cranial arteries, especially the temporal arteries. Possible autoimmunity to elastic lamina. Prevalence estimated at 6 in 100,000. W > B; older than 50, average age 70. Unilateral throbbing headache gradually replaced by burning temporal & facial pain. Throbbing coincides with heartbeat. Pain during chewing or pressure on temple; can mimic toothache, jaw or tongue pain. Vision loss; transient or permanent (50%). Treatment with systemic or local steroids. Atypical facial neuralgia is a persistent pain in the maxillofacial region that does not fit the diagnostic criteria of other causes of orofacial pain (diagnosis by exclusion). “Traveling patient”; sometimes labeled as neurotic, obsessive-compulsive, anxiety-depressive or a hypochondriac. F > M; age 30-60. Present most often with continuous or deep gnawing ache, intense burning, pressure or sharp pain on small area of face, single alveolus or quadrant, temple, neck or occipital area. Drug management includes tricyclic anti-depressants, serotonin reuptake inhibitors & anticonvulsants (such as gabapentin). Other treatments include psychotherapy, behavior modification, transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), nerve block and nerve obliteration. TRATMENTS Rule out surgical lesions (tumor, etc.) Neuropathic vs. nociceptive? Develop a strategy o Lay out a plan Conservative initial dosing to avoid side effects Monotherapy is preferable if possible o Escalate dose to effect or toxicity If second drug needed, choose agent in different class o Na+ channel blcoker, GABA agonist, etc. PHARMACOLOGICAL THERAPY Non-opioid analgesic Opiates Anti-epileptics drugs (AEDs) Antidepressant medications Neuroleptics Antispasmodics Miscellaneous drugs Botox