# Precise balloon pressure regulation in percutaneous balloon compression for trigeminal neuralgia: evidence from a single-center prospective cohort

**Authors:** Fei Wang, Kun Guo, Qihao Sun, Jian Zhang, Bingwen Yu, ShaoPeng Peng

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fsurg.2026.1651583 · Frontiers in Surgery · 2026-03-10

## TL;DR

This study identifies optimal pressure ranges during balloon compression for trigeminal neuralgia to maximize pain relief and minimize complications.

## Contribution

The paper introduces phase-specific pressure thresholds for balloon compression that improve treatment outcomes in trigeminal neuralgia.

## Key findings

- Higher balloon pressures correlate with more severe facial hypoaesthesia.
- Lower pressures increase recurrence risk of trigeminal neuralgia.
- Operating within defined pressure ranges achieved high pain relief with minimal complications.

## Abstract

Trigeminal neuralgia (TN) causes severe paroxysmal facial pain and quality-of-life impairment. Percutaneous balloon compression (PBC) is minimally invasive, yet efficacy and complication rates remain variable. We conducted a single-centre prospective cohort study to define phase-specific intraballoon pressure thresholds that maximize pain relief while minimising facial hypoaesthesia and recurrence.

115-TN patients undergoing PBC (Jan 2017–Aug 2024) had real-time pressure recorded at 1 Hz. Pressure morphometrics were classified into pear-shaping, maintenance and full-compression phases. Reference intervals (RI) were established with the non-parametric CLSI C28-A2 method (n ≥ 4,000 measurements per phase). Associations between phase pressures and 24-h hypoaesthesia grade or 24-month recurrence were examined with Spearman correlation and Cox regression (Schoenfeld validation).

Higher phase pressures correlated with more severe hypoaesthesia (ρ = 0.44–0.62, P < 0.01), whereas lower pressures predicted increased recurrence (HR = 0.87 per 5 kPa, 95% CI 0.80–0.94, P = 0.002). Optimal RI were: pear-shaping 126.5–156.8 kPa, maintenance 117.9–136.1 kPa, full-compression 119.9–141.9 kPa. Operating within these bands produced BNI-I/II pain relief in 98% of patients with only 16% transient Grade-III hypoaesthesia.

Real-time, phase-adapted pressure control within the proposed RI allows surgeons to standardize PBC while individualizing the therapeutic window, improving safety and durability of pain relief.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** trigeminal neuralgia (MONDO:0008599)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** TN (MESH:D014277), pain (MESH:D010146), facial pain (MESH:D005157)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13008686/full.md

## References

27 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13008686/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13008686