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Original Research

Open Access

The Psychosocial and Affective Burden of Posttraumatic Neuropathy Following Injuries to the Trigeminal Nerve

  • Jared G. Smith1
  • Leigh-Ann Elias2
  • Zehra Yilmaz2
  • Sarah Barker2
  • Kunal Shah3
  • Sajni Shah1
  • Tara Renton2,*,

1Univ London, Div Populat Hlth Sci & Educ, London, England

2Kings Coll London, Inst Dent, Dept Oral Surg, London SE5 9RS, England

3Kings Coll London, Inst Dent, London SE5 9RS, England

DOI: 10.11607/jop.1056 Vol.27,Issue 4,December 2013 pp.293-303

Published: 30 December 2013

*Corresponding Author(s): Tara Renton E-mail: tara.renton@kcl.ac.uk

Abstract

Aims: To explore the impact of trigeminal nerve injuries on quality of life, including the effect of pain on psychological and affective function. Methods: An observational, cross-sectional survey design was employed. Fifty-six patients with inferior alveolar nerve injury (IANI) and 33 patients with lingual nerve injury (LNI) completed standardized self-report measures of pain intensity, pain catastrophizing, self-efficacy to cope with pain, and mood, in addition to generic and oral health-related quality of life (HRQoL) indicators. The impact of pain severity on these aspects of psychosocial function was examined. Summary statistics were calculated for all measures and compared with norms or values of other relevant studies, when available, using t tests. The impact of pain severity on these aspects of psychosocial function was examined using analysis of variance and hierarchical multivariate regression models. Results: The majority of patients reported pain associated with their nerve injury (86%). Nerve injury had a significant impact on all investigated domains, and this was closely linked with reported pain levels. Patients with severe pain showed particularly elevated levels of depression and pain catastrophizing, as well as substantially reduced HRQoL and coping efficacy levels. Pain intensity level was a significant predictor in all models except anxiety, uniquely contributing between 17% and 26% of variance to the prediction of pain catastrophizing, depression, coping efficacy, and generic and oral HRQoL. Conclusion: Traumatic injury to the trigeminal nerve is associated with a substantial patient burden, particularly in patients who experience severe neuropathic pain as part of their condition. These findings highlight the need to identify, develop, and evaluate more effective treatments for neuropathic pain in trigeminal nerve injury that will not only provide clinically meaningful reductions in pain but also improve patients' quality of life.


Keywords

iatrogenic; neuropathic pain; psychological function; psychosocial; trigeminal nerve injury


Cite and Share

Jared G. Smith,Leigh-Ann Elias,Zehra Yilmaz,Sarah Barker,Kunal Shah,Sajni Shah,Tara Renton. The Psychosocial and Affective Burden of Posttraumatic Neuropathy Following Injuries to the Trigeminal Nerve. Journal of Oral & Facial Pain and Headache. 2013. 27(4);293-303.

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