G50.0: Trigeminal neuralgia
Your trigeminal nerve is damaged. As a result, you have facial pain.
The trigeminal nerve is on each side of the body, starting in your brain and coursing down the face to the masseter muscles (chewing muscles). The trigeminal nerve enables us to feel sensations on the skin of the face and on the tongue. These sensations include, for example, touch, heat and pain. The trigeminal nerve also runs to the chewing muscles so that we can chew.
Because your trigeminal nerve is damaged you keep getting severe facial pain. When this happens the muscles in the face may sometimes contract, or the eyes may water. The pain usually comes on suddenly. The pain can be triggered by touch, speaking or eating, for example.
The trigeminal nerve may get damaged when a blood vessel presses on it, for example.
Additional indicator
On medical documents, the ICD code is often appended by letters that indicate the diagnostic certainty or the affected side of the body.
- G: Confirmed diagnosis
- V: Tentative diagnosis
- Z: Condition after
- A: Excluded diagnosis
- L: Left
- R: Right
- B: Both sides
Further information
Source
Provided by the non-profit organization “Was hab’ ich?” gemeinnützige GmbH on behalf of the Federal Ministry of Health (BMG).