Trigeminal Neuralgia Treatment via Piezosurgical Enlargement of the Mental Foramen

<b>Background:</b> This article and the novel surgical approach described here were inspired by the ideas and observations of the late professors T. Pawela and J. Wnukiewicz. The authors present the medical history and unique surgical treatment of four patients with trigeminal neuralgia,...

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Published in:Life
Main Authors: Radosław Jadach, Karolina Osypko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-02-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/15/3/382
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author Radosław Jadach
Karolina Osypko
author_facet Radosław Jadach
Karolina Osypko
author_sort Radosław Jadach
collection DOAJ
container_title Life
description <b>Background:</b> This article and the novel surgical approach described here were inspired by the ideas and observations of the late professors T. Pawela and J. Wnukiewicz. The authors present the medical history and unique surgical treatment of four patients with trigeminal neuralgia, who, despite pharmacological treatment and numerous specialists being involved in the treatment process, continued suffering. Our belief is that the direct cause of the symptoms is a narrow mental foramen, which compresses the mental nerve. It can be easily verified by local anesthesia administration to verify the trigger point, and by analyzing CBCT scans with a special emphasis on the diameter of both mental foramina. <b>Methods</b>: Surgical decompression by narrow mental foramen enlargement was conducted with a piezosurgical device. In this procedure, a rectangle of cortical bone is gently and precisely cut around the mental foramen and then into smaller pieces. This technique enables its easy and safe removal. Then, the mental nerve is left loose, uncompressed. <b>Results</b>: All four patients reported immediate recovery, their pain attacks stopped, and their quality of life improved significantly. One patient reported temporal hypoesthesia that lasted 5 months post-op. About 2 years post-op, another patient reported rare recurrences of pain, although much less severe than before surgery. <b>Conclusions</b>: This type of treatment may be considered when trigeminal neuralgia cannot be classified as classic or as secondary and is unresponsive to pharmacological treatment. A piezosurgical device seems to be the safest option in terms of potential damage to the nerve. Further research should include a larger sample of patients and focus on analyzing the mental foramina diameter of patients with idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia.
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spelling doaj-art-e9912eac7a0e41ffa7981d6c00fb86922025-08-20T01:48:57ZengMDPI AGLife2075-17292025-02-0115338210.3390/life15030382Trigeminal Neuralgia Treatment via Piezosurgical Enlargement of the Mental ForamenRadosław Jadach0Karolina Osypko1Private Practice, ul. Eugeniusza Horbaczewskiego 53A, 54-130 Wrocław, PolandDental Salon, Oral Surgery Academy, ul. Eugeniusza Horbaczewskiego 53A, 54-130 Wrocław, Poland<b>Background:</b> This article and the novel surgical approach described here were inspired by the ideas and observations of the late professors T. Pawela and J. Wnukiewicz. The authors present the medical history and unique surgical treatment of four patients with trigeminal neuralgia, who, despite pharmacological treatment and numerous specialists being involved in the treatment process, continued suffering. Our belief is that the direct cause of the symptoms is a narrow mental foramen, which compresses the mental nerve. It can be easily verified by local anesthesia administration to verify the trigger point, and by analyzing CBCT scans with a special emphasis on the diameter of both mental foramina. <b>Methods</b>: Surgical decompression by narrow mental foramen enlargement was conducted with a piezosurgical device. In this procedure, a rectangle of cortical bone is gently and precisely cut around the mental foramen and then into smaller pieces. This technique enables its easy and safe removal. Then, the mental nerve is left loose, uncompressed. <b>Results</b>: All four patients reported immediate recovery, their pain attacks stopped, and their quality of life improved significantly. One patient reported temporal hypoesthesia that lasted 5 months post-op. About 2 years post-op, another patient reported rare recurrences of pain, although much less severe than before surgery. <b>Conclusions</b>: This type of treatment may be considered when trigeminal neuralgia cannot be classified as classic or as secondary and is unresponsive to pharmacological treatment. A piezosurgical device seems to be the safest option in terms of potential damage to the nerve. Further research should include a larger sample of patients and focus on analyzing the mental foramina diameter of patients with idiopathic trigeminal neuralgia.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/15/3/382mental nervetrigeminal neuralgiafacial painpiezosurgerysurgical treatmentdecompression
spellingShingle Radosław Jadach
Karolina Osypko
Trigeminal Neuralgia Treatment via Piezosurgical Enlargement of the Mental Foramen
mental nerve
trigeminal neuralgia
facial pain
piezosurgery
surgical treatment
decompression
title Trigeminal Neuralgia Treatment via Piezosurgical Enlargement of the Mental Foramen
title_full Trigeminal Neuralgia Treatment via Piezosurgical Enlargement of the Mental Foramen
title_fullStr Trigeminal Neuralgia Treatment via Piezosurgical Enlargement of the Mental Foramen
title_full_unstemmed Trigeminal Neuralgia Treatment via Piezosurgical Enlargement of the Mental Foramen
title_short Trigeminal Neuralgia Treatment via Piezosurgical Enlargement of the Mental Foramen
title_sort trigeminal neuralgia treatment via piezosurgical enlargement of the mental foramen
topic mental nerve
trigeminal neuralgia
facial pain
piezosurgery
surgical treatment
decompression
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/15/3/382
work_keys_str_mv AT radosławjadach trigeminalneuralgiatreatmentviapiezosurgicalenlargementofthementalforamen
AT karolinaosypko trigeminalneuralgiatreatmentviapiezosurgicalenlargementofthementalforamen