BACKGROUND: Radiofrequency rhizotomy is a percutaneous procedure for trigeminal neuralgia frequently performed with intermittent awakening, although the utility and accuracy of this procedure in continuously sedated patients have not yet been evaluated. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate pain relief in patients with trigeminal neuralgia undergoing radiofrequency rhizotomy under continuous sedation. METHODS: Patients from 2012 to 2017 who underwent radiofrequency rhizotomy for trigeminal neuralgia were evaluated retrospectively. Barrow Neurological Institute Pain Intensity scores were assigned to determine relapse at 1 mo, 1 yr, 3 yr, and 5 yr. Descriptive relapse rates for patients with multiple sclerosis and those undergoing repeat procedures are also reported. RESULTS: A total of 90.8% of procedures reported Barrow Neurological Institute I-III score at 1 mo (P < .0001), 66.3% at 1 yr (P = .0012), and 71.1% at 3 yr (P = .0003). Duration to relapse was 3.0 and 6.0 at 1 and 3 yr, respectively. Procedures in patients with multiple sclerosis reported 100% relief at 1 mo and 87.5% relief at 1 yr (P = .0099). The presence of numbness and postoperative medication changes were not associated with pain relief (P = .0063, P = .1338). CONCLUSION: The use of continuous sedation in radiofrequency rhizotomy for trigeminal neuralgia provides pain relief comparable to the recorded literature rate for procedures with intermittent awakening.
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