Traumatic Brain Injury
Evaluation and treatment planning for traumatic brain injury, including concussion, brain bleeding, skull fracture, swelling, and neurological symptoms after head trauma.
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia is a rare cranial nerve pain condition involving the glossopharyngeal nerve, also called the ninth cranial nerve or cranial nerve IX. This nerve carries sensation from parts of the throat, tonsil region, back of the tongue, and middle ear area.
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia can cause sudden episodes of severe, sharp, stabbing, or electric shock-like pain. The pain often affects the throat, tonsil area, base of the tongue, ear, or area beneath the angle of the jaw. Some patients may also have symptoms related to nearby vagus nerve pathways, which can rarely affect heart rate or cause fainting.
De Novo Brain & Spine evaluates adult patients with suspected glossopharyngeal neuralgia when symptoms suggest cranial nerve irritation, neurovascular compression, skull base disease, tumor, prior nerve injury, or facial and throat pain that has not been explained by dental, sinus, ear, throat, or primary headache causes.
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia symptoms depend on the nerve pathways involved, pain triggers, underlying cause, and whether nearby cranial nerves are affected.
Common signs and symptoms may include:
Seek urgent medical evaluation for facial, throat, or ear pain with fainting, severe dizziness, heart rhythm symptoms, trouble swallowing, voice changes, new numbness, facial weakness, fever, neck swelling, severe headache, vision changes, or rapidly worsening symptoms. Seek emergency medical care or call 911 for loss of consciousness, chest pain, shortness of breath, sudden weakness, sudden speech difficulty, sudden facial drooping, or sudden vision loss.
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia occurs when the glossopharyngeal nerve becomes irritated, compressed, inflamed, or affected by another condition. In some patients, no clear cause is found.
Possible causes and related factors may include:
These causes and risk factors do not mean every patient has a dangerous structural condition. Treatment planning depends on the pain pattern, neurological examination, imaging findings, response to prior medication, and whether another dental, ear, throat, skull base, vascular, or neurological condition is identified.
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia is diagnosed through careful history, physical examination, neurological examination, and targeted testing when appropriate. There is no single simple test that confirms every case, so the pain pattern and triggers are very important.
Common diagnostic steps may include:
The goal of diagnosis is to determine whether symptoms are consistent with glossopharyngeal neuralgia, identify whether a structural cause is present, and distinguish it from trigeminal neuralgia, dental disease, ear disease, throat disease, TMJ disorder, migraine, or other facial pain conditions.
Glossopharyngeal neuralgia treatment depends on the cause, pain severity, triggers, neurological examination, imaging findings, heart rhythm symptoms, prior treatment response, and overall health. Not every patient needs surgery.
Treatment options may include:
Neurosurgical treatment is not appropriate for every patient with glossopharyngeal neuralgia. Neurosurgical evaluation may be considered when symptoms suggest neurovascular compression, skull base disease, tumor, structural nerve compression, or pain that remains severe despite appropriate medical treatment.
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