Percutaneous balloon compression for trigeminal neuralgia due to the primitive trigeminal artery: A case report and review of the literature

Authors

  • Runqi Cheng
  • Tiansheng Wang
  • Songshan Chai
  • Bo Yang
  • Nanxiang Xiong Department of Neurosurgery, Zhongnan Hosptial of Wuhan University, Wuhan 430071, Hubei Province, People's Republic of China

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54029/2023kpc

Keywords:

trigeminal neuralgia, primitive trigeminal artery, microvascular decompression, percutaneous balloon compression

Abstract

Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) is often caused by vascular compression of the trigeminal nerve cisternal segment. TN due to the primitive trigeminal artery formed by developmental variants of cerebral vessels is rare. We report here a 59-year-old male with TN whose preoperative MRI showed a primitive trigeminal artery that compressed the trigeminal nerve, and microvascular decompression (MVD) was performed to separate the vessel from the trigeminal nerve cisternal segment. The pain was relieved after MVD, but it recurred two months later. MRI reexamination showed that although MVD relieved the vascular compression of the trigeminal nerve cisternal segment, the nerve in the Meckel’s cave was still compressed by PTA, which was thought to be the cause of TN recurrence. Due to the limitations of the surgical microscope view, completing the vascular decompression at the Meckel’s cave is challenging. So percutaneous balloon compression was performed. After the procedure, the TN subsided. The patient remained pain free at one year follow-up. To our knowledge, this is the first case of primitive trigeminal artery-associated TN treated by percutaneous balloon compression. This case suggests that percutaneous balloon compression may be considered for TN caused by compression of the primitive trigeminal artery when MVD is difficult to perform.

Published

2023-09-30

Issue

Section

Case Report