It is important for the clinician managing patients with acute or chronic orofacial pain to understand the basic neuroanatomy and neurophysiology of this type of pain. Most of the orofacial pain pathways communicate through the trigeminal nerve,
6 the largest and most complex cranial nerve. They are mostly transmitted by sensory, motor, and autonomic nerve networks. To better understand orofacial pain, it is an essential to understand the peripheral and the central connection of the trigeminal nerve system. It is out of the scope
of this chapter to describe the details of these connections. In general, nociceptors in the facial and oral regions are responsible for the recognition of proprioception, mechanical stimuli, thermal stimuli, and pain perception.
7 Trigeminal nerve (via afferent fibers A, B, and C) is the dominant nerve that relays sensory impulses from the orofacial area to the central nervous system. The facial nerve, the glossopharyngeal nerve, the vagus nerve, and the upper cervical nerves (C2 and C3) also transmit sensory information from the face and surrounding area. The upper cervical nerves provide innervation to the back of the head, lower face, and neck. More importantly, they converge in the brainstem at the trigeminal nucleus. Most nociceptive orofacial pain impulses are transmitted by the somatic nerves, a significant portion is transmitted by autonomic nerves and a small portion may be transmitted by motor nerves.
Heterotopic and referred pain are common in the acute and chronic orofacial pain conditions. Orofacial heterotopic pain occurs when the source of pain is not located in the region of pain perception; and referred pain describes pain felt at a location served by one nerve, but the source of nociception arrives at the subnucleus caudalis of the trigeminal nerve by a different nerve. The heterotopic and referred phenomena explained by the complexity of the trigeminal network and the convergence of multiple sensory nerves carrying input to the trigeminal spinal nuclei from cutaneous and deep tissues located throughout the head and neck set the stage for referred pain.
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