Post-traumatic Occipital Neuralgia - Surgical Versus Medical Management
Post-Traumatic Neuralgia, Occipital Neuralgia
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Post-Traumatic Neuralgia
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- History of head or neck trauma as an inciting event for occipital headaches
- Occipital neuralgia headache, as diagnosed by neurologist, and as defined by the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-3). 13.4 - occipital neuralgia:
Description:
Unilateral or bilateral paroxysmal, shooting or stabbing pain in the posterior part of the scalp, in the distribution of the greater, lesser or third occipital nerves, sometimes accompanied by diminished sensation or dysaesthesia in the affected area and commonly associated with tenderness over the involved nerve(s).
Diagnostic criteria:
- Unilateral or bilateral pain fulfilling criteria B-E
- Pain is located in the distribution of the greater, lesser and/or third occipital nerves
Pain has two of the following three characteristics:
- recurring in paroxysmal attacks lasting from a few seconds to minutes
- severe intensity
- shooting, stabbing or sharp in quality
Pain is associated with both of the following:
- dysaesthesia and/or allodynia apparent during innocuous stimulation of the scalp and/or hair
either or both of the following:
- tenderness over the affected nerve branches
- trigger points at the emergence of the greater occipital nerve or in the area of distribution of C2
- Pain is eased temporarily by local anaesthetic block of the affected nerve
- Not better accounted for by another ICHD-3 diagnosis.
Comments:
The pain of 13.4 Occipital neuralgia may reach the fronto-orbital area through trigeminocervical interneuronal connections in the trigeminal spinal nuclei.
13.4 Occipital neuralgia must be distinguished from occipital referral of pain arising from the atlantoaxial or upper zygapophyseal joints or from tender trigger points in neck muscles or their insertions.
- Age: 18-65
- Male and female
Exclusion Criteria:
- Headache of any etiology other than specified in the inclusion criteria.
- Patients with occipital referral of pain arising from the atlantoaxial or upper zygapophyseal joints or from tender trigger points in neck muscles or their insertions
- Pregnant or breastfeeding females
- Patients with significant comorbidities including short life expectancy, malignancy, degenerative central nervous system diseases, infection, severe psychiatric disorders
Sites / Locations
- Rush University Medical Center
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
No Intervention
Experimental
Continued maximal medical management
Surgical occipital nerve neurolysis