Burning Mouth Syndrome as a Central Pain Disorder: A Case Study Demonstrating Response to Occipital Nerve Block Treatment
Shachar Zion Shemesh, Paz Kelmer, Lior Ungar

TL;DR
A man with chronic mouth burning pain found full relief through nerve blocks targeting central pain pathways, suggesting a new treatment approach.
Contribution
Demonstrates that occipital nerve blocks can effectively treat Burning Mouth Syndrome by modulating central pain circuits.
Findings
Occipital nerve blocks led to complete remission of Burning Mouth Syndrome in a male patient.
Pain reduction increased with successive nerve blocks, reaching 100% relief after the third block.
A mild recurrence responded fully to a fourth block, maintaining pain-free status for a year.
Abstract
Background: Burning Mouth Syndrome (BMS) is a chronic orofacial pain condition characterized by a burning sensation in the oral cavity without identifiable lesions. It predominantly affects women (especially postmenopausal) but can occur in men. BMS is considered a multifactorial neuropathic pain disorder involving both peripheral small-fiber neuropathy and central dysregulation, often accompanied by taste alterations (dysgusia) and xerostomia despite normal oral exams. Treatment is challenging, with modest responses to agents like clonazepam, tricyclic antidepressants, or gabapentinoids. Observations: We present a 67-year-old male with recalcitrant primary BMS who showed complete remission temporally associated with occipital nerve blockade, likely affecting central trigeminocervical pathways. Initial therapy with amitriptyline (25 mg) and gabapentin (900 mg/day) yielded ~30% pain…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSalivary Gland Disorders and Functions · Glycogen Storage Diseases and Myoclonus · Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research
