Trigeminal neuralgia

trigeminal neuralgia: Trigeminal neuralgia is a nerve disorder that causes a stabbing or electric-shock-like pain in parts of the face. The pain lasts a few seconds to a few minutes, and usually on only one side of the face. It can also cause muscle spasms in the face the same time as the pain. The pain may result from a blood vessel pressing against the trigeminal nerve (the nerve that carries pain, feeling, and other sensations from the brain to the skin of theface), as a complication of multiple sclerosis, or due to compression of the nerve by a tumor or cyst. In some cases, the cause is unknown. Treatment options include medicines, surgery, and complementary approaches.

Endpoint definition

Name G6_TRINEU
Long name Trigeminal neuralgia
Hospital Discharge registry ICD-10: G500, ICD-8: 35199
Cause of Death registry ICD-10: G500, ICD-8: 35199
KELA reimboursements codes 119
Level in the ICD-hierarchy 3
First defined in version DF2
Latin name Neuralgia trigeminalis

Summary Statistics

Key figures

All Female Male
Number of individuals 800 561 239
Unadjusted prevalence (%) 0.37 0.46 0.25
Mean age at first event (years) 53.90 53.10 55.78
Case fatality at 5-years (%) 2.00 1.25 3.77

Longitudinal metrics

All Female Male
Median nb. of events per indiv. 2.0 2.0 1.0
Recurrence at 6 months (%) 45.25 45.28 45.19

Survival analyses between endpoints

Plot

before Trigeminal neuralgia
after Trigeminal neuralgia

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Drugs most likely to be purchased after Trigeminal neuralgia