Background
The presence of periventricular lesions (PVL) on MRI scans is part of the revised McDonald multiple sclerosis (MS) diagnostic criteria. However, PVL can be found in other neurological diseases including stroke and migraine. Migraine is highly prevalent in patients with MS.
Objective
To determine if PVL are specific for patients with MS compared to stroke and migraine.
Methods
We studied patients diagnosed with clinically isolated syndrome (CIS), relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS), migraine, and ischemic stroke. The number, location and the volume of PVL were identified on brain MRI scans and analyzed.
Results
The number and volume of PVL adjacent to the body and the posterior horn of the lateral ventricles were significantly increased on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery MRI in RRMS compared to migraine. There were no significant differences in the total number and volume of PVL in ischemic stroke patients compared to the age-matched RRMS patients nor in the number and volume of PVL adjacent to the anterior and temporal horns of the lateral ventricles on FLAIR images in migraine compared to CIS or RRMS.
Conclusion
In contrast to PVL adjacent to the body and the posterior horn of the lateral ventricles, PVL adjacent to the anterior and temporal horns of the lateral ventricles may not be specific for CIS/RRMS when compared to migraine, the disease highly prevalent among patients with MS. PVL are not specific for MS when compared to ischemic stroke.
PurposePersistent idiopathic facial pain (PIFP) is a poorly defined and debilitating chronic pain state with a challenging and often inadequate treatment course. This is the first case report identifying the novel use of low-dose lumbar intrathecal ziconotide to successfully treat PIFP with nearly complete resolution of pain and minimal to no side effects.MethodsThe patient was a 37 year-old female whose PIFP was refractory to multimodal medication management and multiple neurovascular surgical interventions. A single-shot lumbar intrathecal trial of ziconotide (2.5 mL, equivalent 2.5 μg) was injected when she was at her baseline pain level — VAS 7/10. She received complete resolution of her pain for about 9 hours, concordant with ziconotide’s half-life. She was subsequently implanted with a lumbar intrathecal delivery system.ResultsThe patient experienced complete resolution of her facial pain with a single-shot intrathecal trial of ziconotide. The intrathecal pump system has provided nearly complete (VAS 1/10) pain relief. Two flares of pain occurred 10 and 18 months after pump placement, which subsequently resolved after increasing the ziconotide dose by 0.5 μg/day on each occasion. The patient is currently maintained on a dose of 2.0 μg/day and is pain-free.ConclusionThis is the first case report describing the use of a single-shot lumbar intrathecal trial of ziconotide and subsequent placement of lumbar (as opposed to thoracic) intrathecal ziconotide pump for PIFP. A single-injection intrathecal trial is a low-risk, viable option for patients with this debilitating and frustrating pain condition. Successful trials and subsequent intrathecal pump placement with ziconotide may supplant multimodal medication management and/or invasive orofacial surgical intervention for PIFP.
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