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Facial Pain
Facial pain has a long list of possible causes but the diagnosis can often be made by a good history and examination. The common causes are often benign and self-limiting but it is essential not to miss those conditions that require urgent treatment, e.g. temporal arteritis, or early diagnosis, e.g. malignancy. There is a tendency to overdiagnose bacterial sinusitis when the real cause may be a viral upper respiratory tract infection or, much less frequently, a more serious cause of facial pain.
- Sinus: sinusitis, trauma, carcinoma
- Nose: upper respiratory tract infection, nasal injury and foreign bodies
- Ear: otitis media, otitis externa
- Mastoid: mastoiditis
- Teeth: dental abscess
- Neurological: trigeminal neuralgia, herpes zoster
- Parotid gland: mumps, other causes of parotitis, abscess, duct obstruction, calculi, tumour
- Eye: orbital cellulitis, glaucoma.
- Temporomandibular joint dysfunction and pain
- Cluster headaches, migraine
- Temporal arteritis
- Tumours: nasopharyngeal, oral, posterior fossa
- Bone: maxillary or mandibular osteitis, cyst
- Atypical facial pain: more common in the elderly and in women; often linked with depression
- Lung cancer: upper lobe1
Symptoms
- Site:
- Pain in the region of the ear may be referred from the skin, teeth, tonsils, pharynx, larynx or neck.
- Tenderness over the maxilla may be due to sinusitis, dental abscess or carcinoma.
- Character:
- Trigeminal neuralgia: intermittent sharp, severe pain in the distribution of the divisions of the trigeminal nerve.
- Infections of teeth, mastoid and ear: often dull, aching quality.
- Precipitating factors:
- Precipitated by food or chewing: dental abscess, salivary gland disorder, temporomandibular joint disorder or jaw claudication due to temporal arteritis.
- Trigeminal neuralgia: even slightest touch of the skin causes intense pain.
- Associated symptoms:
- Obstruction of the lacrimal duct by nasopharygeal carcinoma may cause watering of the eyes.
- Otorrhoea and/or hearing loss suggest an ear or mastoid cause.
- Nasal obstruction and rhinorrhoea may be due to maxillary sinusitis or carcinoma of the maxillary antrum. Carcinoma of the maxillary antrum may also present with unilateral epistaxis.
- Proximal muscle weakness and pain may be due to polymyalgia rheumatica, associated with temporal arteritis.
Signs
- Unilateral erythema and vesicles in the distribution of the trigeminal nerve: herpes zoster infection (may not be present in the early stages of the disease).
- Localised erythema or swelling: localised infection or carcinoma.
- Inspection of nose and throat may demonstrate a nasopharyngeal tumour.
- Facial palsy: may be due to a tumour of the parotid gland.
- Tenderness of the superficial temporal artery associated with temporal arteritis.
- Cervical lymphadenopathy: infection or carcinoma.
- Full blood count: raised white cell count in infection or malignancy.
- ESR, CRP: Increase in infection, malignancy, temporal arteritis.
- X-rays: opacification of the sinus and destruction of bone with carcinoma of sinuses. Opacification may also occur in sinusitis. Mastoid films may show opacification in cases of mastoiditis.
- CT or MRI scan: carcinoma sinuses, nasopharyngeal carcinoma, parotid conditions. Extent of tumours and invasion.
- Sialography: parotid conditions, e.g. duct stones, sialectasis.
- Fine needle aspiration: parotid tumours.
- The essential aspect of management in primary care is to make an accurate diagnosis. The management will then depend on the identified cause of facial pain.
- Tricyclic antidepressants may be useful.
Document References
- Demez P, Goffart Y, Daele J; Facial pain from visceral origin. Acta Otorhinolaryngol Belg. 2004;58(4):141-2. [abstract]
Internet and Further Reading
- British Brain and Spine Foundation; Face pain: a guide for patients and carers.
- Krolczyk SJ; Persistent Idiopathic Facial Pain. eMedicine, March 2007.
DocID: 2129
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp2244
Last Updated: 9 May 2007
Review Date: 8 May 2009
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