Radiology Case Reports (Oct 2021)

Trigeminal neuralgia caused by Dandy-walker malformation: A case report and systematic review of the literature

  • Juna Musa,
  • Masum Rahman,
  • Angela Guy,
  • Ilir Ahmetgjekaj,
  • Ali Guy,
  • Ina Kola,
  • Abu Bakar Siddik,
  • Alireza Shoushtarizadaeh,
  • Kristi Saliaj,
  • Guri Hyseni,
  • Fjolla Hyseni

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
pp. 3084 – 3089

Abstract

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Trigeminal neuralgia is a pain condition that affects the face along the distribution of the trigeminal nerve and can be recurrent and chronic. Dandy-Walker syndrome is a complex congenital brain anomaly that occurs during embryonic development of the cerebellum and the fourth ventricle. It is characterized by inferior cerebellar vermis hypoplasia and incomplete formation of the fourth ventricle. Dandy-Walker Syndrome is associated with comorbid genetic conditions. It can include congenital heart defects, eye abnormalities, intellectual disability, congenital tumors, and other brain defects such as agenesis of the corpus callosum. However, associations of trigeminal neuralgia and Dandy Walker syndrome have been an infrequent entity. Herein, we report a case of a 23-year-old female patient that presented with complaints of severe left orofacial pain over two years. MRI evaluation was consistent with Dandy-Walker malformation findings that we suspect caused the compression in the trigeminal root entry zone that ultimately gave rise to the patient's symptoms.