I have it and as I right this I'm about to have my third surgery for it. You get out of bad luck.
There is no one reason you get trigeminal neuralgia.
There is a theory, not as much in the forefront as it used to be, that a vessel falls against the trigeminal nerve and triggers the pain.
For some it occurs as part of their multiple sclerosis, for others there is no, at least found/obvious reason. For me, I have a birth defect that resulted in dozens of extra fine vessels throughout the one side of my brain and some of them caused the pain.
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Carol Jay Levy
author A PAINED LIFE, a chronic pain journey
Women In Pain Awareness Group
accredited to the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities member U.N. NGO group, Persons With Disabilities
(My signature is to give you my bona fides as someone with chronic intractable pain/trigeminal neuralgia)
Other names for Trigeminal Neuralgia are prosopalagia, suicide disease or Fothergill's disease.
Trigeminal neuralgia (tic douloureaux) is a trigeminal nerve function disorders, which trigeminal (cranial nerve V) is bring sensation from the face to the brain.Trigeminal nerve function disorders causes pain attack sharply. It can happen during few second to few minutes. Actually, trigeminal neuralgia can happen in the adult period, but it's often found in the geriatric.http://www.squidoo.com/trigeminal-neuralgia-cure
I think hydrocodone can help you.. Commonly, to reduce the pain of trigeminal neuralgia is given carbamazepine, if isn't any result or arise side effect seriously, replaces by phenitoin. For many cases, uses bachlophen and anti depressant drugs to recovery the trigeminal neuralgia. (source:http://www.squidoo.com/trigeminal-neuralgia-cure)
A common treatment for Trigeminal Neuralgia is medications such as Anticonvulsants and Antispasmodic agents. Trigeminal Neuralgia may also be treated by surgery procedures such as micro-vascular decompression and gamma knife radio-surgery.
I believe it does. I have Trigeminal Neuralgia and I was recently in a situation where I got extremely frustrated, borderline angry. I know for a fact that my pain increased in frequency and severity. So, to answer your question-- yes, I believe stress worsens trigeminal neuralgia.
The trigeminal nerve is responsible for transmitting sensory information from the face to the brain. In trigeminal neuralgia, this nerve becomes irritated or compressed, causing severe facial pain.
Trigeminal neuralgia
Another name for tic douloureux is trigeminal neuralgia. It is a chronic pain condition that affects the trigeminal nerve, causing intense, stabbing facial pain.
People with this pain often wince or twitch, which is where trigeminal neuralgia gets its French nickname tic douloureux, meaning "painful twitch."
No, it does not resolve itself. Trigeminal Neuralgia only gets worse with time and the damage is permanent. TN affects older people and women more often then men. Some of the best trigeminal neuralgia treatment options include creams, injections and surgery.
Glossopharyngeal, trigeminal, and postherpetic neuralgias sometimes respond to anticonvulsant drugs, such as carbamazepine or phenytoin, or to painkillers, such as acetaminophen. Trigeminal neuralgia may also be relieved by surgery.
Imitrex (sumatriptan) is primarily used to treat migraines and cluster headaches, not trigeminal neuralgia. Trigeminal neuralgia is typically managed with anticonvulsants like carbamazepine or oxcarbazepine. While Imitrex may alleviate headache symptoms, it is not indicated for the specific pain associated with trigeminal neuralgia. Always consult a healthcare professional for appropriate treatment options.