Background: Painful post-traumatic trigeminal neuropathy (PTTN) is a known complication of dental implant therapy. Besides cases resulting of nerve damage during surgery or implant placement, some patients report delayed neuropathic-like symptoms only after implant loading i.e. crown placement. The present retrospective study aimed at describing the clinical features of pain experienced by these patients.
Material and methods: The cohort of patients consulting for chronic orofacial pain at the Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière (Paris, France) between 2015 and 2020 (ABCD study, IRB # TPS 1106180), was screened for patients with history of dental implant placement and persistent pain. Patients with no pain after surgery for 6 months and pain resulting from the loading of the implant, were included.
Results: Among 675 files of patients screened, 5 fulfilled inclusion criteria. All patients were women, mean age 62.4 ± 9.8 y.o, and reported trigeminal neuropathic-like persistent pain. Intensity of pain was described as moderate to severe, with pin and needles, burning and tingling, and electric shocks as main symptoms.
Conclusions: These results suggest that implant loading can trigger trigeminal neuropathy, in a previously sensitized nerve. Putative neurophysiological basis of the phenomenon is discussed. Key words:Neuropathic pain, trigeminal nerve, lesion, dental implant, implant loading, allodynia.
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