Trigeminal Neuralgia Causes
Trigeminal Neuralgia – The most likely cause is a “normal” blood vessel
The most common cause of trigeminal neuralgia is a blood vessel pressing on the trigeminal nerve. To understand how a “normal” blood vessel can press on a “normal” cranial nerve and make that nerve irritated and painful, you need to understand a few things…
Let’s review the basics – Brain Anatomy 101
First, we all have a right and left trigeminal nerve. The trigeminal nerve is one of twelve, paired cranial nerves that have specific “jobs” they all do. We have 12 cranial nerves that are numbered from the top (#1 – olfactory nerve – smell) all the way to the bottom (#12 – hypoglossal nerve – moves one side of the tongue).
The trigeminal was given the number 5 and is also referred to as the “fifth cranial nerve”.
The trigeminal nerve’s primary “job” is to feel your face, teeth, cornea, etc. As such, it’s mostly a “sensory nerve”, meaning it feels all kinds of sensations such as sharp pain, heat, dull pain, aching pain, dust in the eye, cavities, etc. Like a tree, the nerve has three big branches that feel three specific zones of one side of the face.
One branch is responsible for your forehead (V1 or ophthalmic branch), another feels your cheek (V2 or maxillary branch), and one branch feeld your jaw (V3 or mandibular branch).
First, we all have a right and left trigeminal nerve. The trigeminal nerve is one of twelve, paired cranial nerves that have specific “jobs” they all do. We have 12 cranial nerves that are numbered from the top (#1 – olfactory nerve – smell) all the way to the bottom (#12 – hypoglossal nerve – moves one side of the tongue).
The trigeminal was given the number 5 and is also referred to as the “fifth cranial nerve”.
The trigeminal nerve’s primary “job” is to feel your face, teeth, cornea, etc. As such, it’s mostly a “sensory nerve”, meaning it feels all kinds of sensations such as sharp pain, heat, dull pain, aching pain, dust in the eye, cavities, etc. Like a tree, the nerve has three big branches that feel three specific zones of one side of the face.
One branch is responsible for your forehead (V1 or ophthalmic branch), another feels your cheek (V2 or maxillary branch), and one branch feeld your jaw (V3 or mandibular branch).
What’s going on inside the trigeminal nerve when I feel pain?
Now that you understand the cause, how can you find pain relief?
There are a variety of treatments for trigeminal neuralgia. You should work closely with an expert team of providers, doctors and surgeons to figure out which pain relief treatments might be best for you. Treatments include, but are not limited to:
- Medications
- Carbamazepine
- Oxcarbazepine
- Gabapentin
- Neurontin
- Baclofen
- Procedures
- Microvascular Decompression Surgery (MVD)
- Gamma Knife Radiosurgery
- Percutaneous Rhizotomy
- Pain stimulation