European Academy of Neurology guideline on trigeminal neuralgia

Standard

European Academy of Neurology guideline on trigeminal neuralgia. / Bendtsen, L; Zakrzewska, J M; Abbott, J; Braschinsky, M; Di Stefano, G; Donnet, A; Eide, P K; Leal, P R L; Maarbjerg, S; May, A; Nurmikko, T; Obermann, M; Jensen, T S; Cruccu, G.

in: EUR J NEUROL, Jahrgang 26, Nr. 6, 06.2019, S. 831-849.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Bendtsen, L, Zakrzewska, JM, Abbott, J, Braschinsky, M, Di Stefano, G, Donnet, A, Eide, PK, Leal, PRL, Maarbjerg, S, May, A, Nurmikko, T, Obermann, M, Jensen, TS & Cruccu, G 2019, 'European Academy of Neurology guideline on trigeminal neuralgia', EUR J NEUROL, Jg. 26, Nr. 6, S. 831-849. https://doi.org/10.1111/ene.13950

APA

Bendtsen, L., Zakrzewska, J. M., Abbott, J., Braschinsky, M., Di Stefano, G., Donnet, A., Eide, P. K., Leal, P. R. L., Maarbjerg, S., May, A., Nurmikko, T., Obermann, M., Jensen, T. S., & Cruccu, G. (2019). European Academy of Neurology guideline on trigeminal neuralgia. EUR J NEUROL, 26(6), 831-849. https://doi.org/10.1111/ene.13950

Vancouver

Bendtsen L, Zakrzewska JM, Abbott J, Braschinsky M, Di Stefano G, Donnet A et al. European Academy of Neurology guideline on trigeminal neuralgia. EUR J NEUROL. 2019 Jun;26(6):831-849. https://doi.org/10.1111/ene.13950

Bibtex

@article{858dafb715234341a8691a1077ba19e9,
title = "European Academy of Neurology guideline on trigeminal neuralgia",
abstract = "BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is an extremely painful condition which can be difficult to diagnose and treat. In Europe, TN patients are managed by many different specialities. Therefore, there is a great need for comprehensive European guidelines for the management of TN. The European Academy of Neurology asked an expert panel to develop recommendations for a series of questions that are essential for daily clinical management of patients with TN.METHODS: A systematic review of the literature was performed and recommendations was developed based on GRADE, where feasible; if not, a good practice statement was given.RESULTS: The use of the most recent classification system is recommended, which diagnoses TN as primary TN, either classical or idiopathic depending on the degree of neurovascular contact, or as secondary TN caused by pathology other than neurovascular contact. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), using a combination of three high-resolution sequences, should be performed as part of the work-up in TN patients, because no clinical characteristics can exclude secondary TN. If MRI is not possible, trigeminal reflexes can be used. Neurovascular contact plays an important role in primary TN, but demonstration of a neurovascular contact should not be used to confirm the diagnosis of TN. Rather, it may help to decide if and when a patient should be referred for microvascular decompression. In acute exacerbations of pain, intravenous infusion of fosphenytoin or lidocaine can be used. For long-term treatment, carbamazepine or oxcarbazepine are recommended as drugs of first choice. Lamotrigine, gabapentin, botulinum toxin type A, pregabalin, baclofen and phenytoin may be used either alone or as add-on therapy. It is recommended that patients should be offered surgery if pain is not sufficiently controlled medically or if medical treatment is poorly tolerated. Microvascular decompression is recommended as first-line surgery in patients with classical TN. No recommendation can be given for choice between any neuroablative treatments or between them and microvascular decompression in patients with idiopathic TN. Neuroablative treatments should be the preferred choice if MRI does not demonstrate any neurovascular contact. Treatment for patients with secondary TN should in general follow the same principles as for primary TN. In addition to medical and surgical management, it is recommended that patients are offered psychological and nursing support.CONCLUSIONS: Compared with previous TN guidelines, there are important changes regarding diagnosis and imaging. These allow better characterization of patients and help in decision making regarding the planning of medical and surgical management. Recommendations on pharmacological and surgical management have been updated. There is a great need for future research on all aspects of TN, including pathophysiology and management.",
keywords = "Analgesics/therapeutic use, Carbamazepine/therapeutic use, Decompression, Surgical, Europe, Gabapentin/therapeutic use, Humans, Neurology, Oxcarbazepine/therapeutic use, Phenytoin/analogs & derivatives, Trigeminal Neuralgia/diagnosis",
author = "L Bendtsen and Zakrzewska, {J M} and J Abbott and M Braschinsky and {Di Stefano}, G and A Donnet and Eide, {P K} and Leal, {P R L} and S Maarbjerg and A May and T Nurmikko and M Obermann and Jensen, {T S} and G Cruccu",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2019 EAN.",
year = "2019",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1111/ene.13950",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "831--849",
journal = "EUR J NEUROL",
issn = "1351-5101",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - European Academy of Neurology guideline on trigeminal neuralgia

AU - Bendtsen, L

AU - Zakrzewska, J M

AU - Abbott, J

AU - Braschinsky, M

AU - Di Stefano, G

AU - Donnet, A

AU - Eide, P K

AU - Leal, P R L

AU - Maarbjerg, S

AU - May, A

AU - Nurmikko, T

AU - Obermann, M

AU - Jensen, T S

AU - Cruccu, G

N1 - © 2019 EAN.

PY - 2019/6

Y1 - 2019/6

N2 - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is an extremely painful condition which can be difficult to diagnose and treat. In Europe, TN patients are managed by many different specialities. Therefore, there is a great need for comprehensive European guidelines for the management of TN. The European Academy of Neurology asked an expert panel to develop recommendations for a series of questions that are essential for daily clinical management of patients with TN.METHODS: A systematic review of the literature was performed and recommendations was developed based on GRADE, where feasible; if not, a good practice statement was given.RESULTS: The use of the most recent classification system is recommended, which diagnoses TN as primary TN, either classical or idiopathic depending on the degree of neurovascular contact, or as secondary TN caused by pathology other than neurovascular contact. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), using a combination of three high-resolution sequences, should be performed as part of the work-up in TN patients, because no clinical characteristics can exclude secondary TN. If MRI is not possible, trigeminal reflexes can be used. Neurovascular contact plays an important role in primary TN, but demonstration of a neurovascular contact should not be used to confirm the diagnosis of TN. Rather, it may help to decide if and when a patient should be referred for microvascular decompression. In acute exacerbations of pain, intravenous infusion of fosphenytoin or lidocaine can be used. For long-term treatment, carbamazepine or oxcarbazepine are recommended as drugs of first choice. Lamotrigine, gabapentin, botulinum toxin type A, pregabalin, baclofen and phenytoin may be used either alone or as add-on therapy. It is recommended that patients should be offered surgery if pain is not sufficiently controlled medically or if medical treatment is poorly tolerated. Microvascular decompression is recommended as first-line surgery in patients with classical TN. No recommendation can be given for choice between any neuroablative treatments or between them and microvascular decompression in patients with idiopathic TN. Neuroablative treatments should be the preferred choice if MRI does not demonstrate any neurovascular contact. Treatment for patients with secondary TN should in general follow the same principles as for primary TN. In addition to medical and surgical management, it is recommended that patients are offered psychological and nursing support.CONCLUSIONS: Compared with previous TN guidelines, there are important changes regarding diagnosis and imaging. These allow better characterization of patients and help in decision making regarding the planning of medical and surgical management. Recommendations on pharmacological and surgical management have been updated. There is a great need for future research on all aspects of TN, including pathophysiology and management.

AB - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is an extremely painful condition which can be difficult to diagnose and treat. In Europe, TN patients are managed by many different specialities. Therefore, there is a great need for comprehensive European guidelines for the management of TN. The European Academy of Neurology asked an expert panel to develop recommendations for a series of questions that are essential for daily clinical management of patients with TN.METHODS: A systematic review of the literature was performed and recommendations was developed based on GRADE, where feasible; if not, a good practice statement was given.RESULTS: The use of the most recent classification system is recommended, which diagnoses TN as primary TN, either classical or idiopathic depending on the degree of neurovascular contact, or as secondary TN caused by pathology other than neurovascular contact. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), using a combination of three high-resolution sequences, should be performed as part of the work-up in TN patients, because no clinical characteristics can exclude secondary TN. If MRI is not possible, trigeminal reflexes can be used. Neurovascular contact plays an important role in primary TN, but demonstration of a neurovascular contact should not be used to confirm the diagnosis of TN. Rather, it may help to decide if and when a patient should be referred for microvascular decompression. In acute exacerbations of pain, intravenous infusion of fosphenytoin or lidocaine can be used. For long-term treatment, carbamazepine or oxcarbazepine are recommended as drugs of first choice. Lamotrigine, gabapentin, botulinum toxin type A, pregabalin, baclofen and phenytoin may be used either alone or as add-on therapy. It is recommended that patients should be offered surgery if pain is not sufficiently controlled medically or if medical treatment is poorly tolerated. Microvascular decompression is recommended as first-line surgery in patients with classical TN. No recommendation can be given for choice between any neuroablative treatments or between them and microvascular decompression in patients with idiopathic TN. Neuroablative treatments should be the preferred choice if MRI does not demonstrate any neurovascular contact. Treatment for patients with secondary TN should in general follow the same principles as for primary TN. In addition to medical and surgical management, it is recommended that patients are offered psychological and nursing support.CONCLUSIONS: Compared with previous TN guidelines, there are important changes regarding diagnosis and imaging. These allow better characterization of patients and help in decision making regarding the planning of medical and surgical management. Recommendations on pharmacological and surgical management have been updated. There is a great need for future research on all aspects of TN, including pathophysiology and management.

KW - Analgesics/therapeutic use

KW - Carbamazepine/therapeutic use

KW - Decompression, Surgical

KW - Europe

KW - Gabapentin/therapeutic use

KW - Humans

KW - Neurology

KW - Oxcarbazepine/therapeutic use

KW - Phenytoin/analogs & derivatives

KW - Trigeminal Neuralgia/diagnosis

U2 - 10.1111/ene.13950

DO - 10.1111/ene.13950

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 30860637

VL - 26

SP - 831

EP - 849

JO - EUR J NEUROL

JF - EUR J NEUROL

SN - 1351-5101

IS - 6

ER -