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Review
. 1994 Feb;56(2):127-138.
doi: 10.1016/0304-3959(94)90086-8.

Trigeminal neuralgia: the role of self-sustaining discharge in the trigeminal ganglion

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Review

Trigeminal neuralgia: the role of self-sustaining discharge in the trigeminal ganglion

Harry Z Rappaport et al. Pain. 1994 Feb.

Abstract

Idiosyncrasies of trigeminal neuralgia provide both clues and constraints on candidate hypotheses concerning the underlying neural mechanism. After reviewing the key clinical aspects of the disease, we propose here a novel hypothesis based on recent findings from experimental nerve-injury preparations. The hypothesis states that trigger stimuli set off bursts of activity in a small cluster of trigeminal ganglion (TRG) neurons that have been rendered hyperexcitable as a result of TRG or trigeminal root damage. Activity then spreads from this "TRG ignition focus" to encompass more widespread portions of the ganglion. After a brief period of autonomous firing (seconds to minutes), activity is quenched and a refractory period is initiated by an intrinsic suppressive (hyperpolarizing) process engaged as a result of the rapid firing. The primary abnormality resides in the TRG and trigeminal root, rather than in the skin or the CNS. Because of this, sensation is essentially normal between periods of ectopic paroxysmal TRG discharge.

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Comment in

  • The riddle of trigeminal neuralgia.
    Canavero S, Bonicalzi V, Pagni CA. Canavero S, et al. Pain. 1995 Feb;60(2):229-230. doi: 10.1016/0304-3959(94)00196-L. Pain. 1995. PMID: 7784109 No abstract available.

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