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Asheville Clinician Publishes New Hypothesis on Trigeminal Neuralgia in Elsevier Journal

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ASHEVILLE, N.C. - Rezul -- Why does a blood vessel touching the trigeminal nerve cause devastating facial pain in some patients — while others with similar anatomy remain completely symptom-free? That clinical paradox, unresolved for decades, is the subject of a new hypothesis paper published by James C. Whittle, M.S., L.Ac., founder of Blue Ridge Acupuncture Clinic in Asheville, in the Elsevier journal Medical Hypotheses.

The paper, titled "The Trigeminal Triad: A Rate-Dependent Model Linking Neurovascular Compression, Vascular Pulsatility, and Sleep-Disordered Breathing in Trigeminal Neuralgia," grew out of more than two decades of clinical observation.

Trigeminal neuralgia is widely considered one of the most severe pain conditions in medicine. It has traditionally been attributed to neurovascular compression — a blood vessel contacting the trigeminal nerve near the brainstem. But a persistent clinical paradox challenges that explanation: many patients with confirmed compression never develop symptoms, while some severe sufferers show little or no detectable compression on imaging.

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Whittle's Trigeminal Triad model proposes that trigeminal neuralgia may emerge when mechanical stress on the nerve exceeds the body's capacity to repair and stabilize its protective myelin sheath. The model integrates three interacting domains: structural vulnerability of the trigeminal nerve (often involving neurovascular compression), elevated vascular pulsatility, and chronic intermittent hypoxia associated with sleep-disordered breathing.

"One of the questions that motivated this work was why the same anatomical finding can be completely asymptomatic in one person and profoundly disabling in another," said Whittle. "The paper explores whether factors affecting nerve injury, repair, and physiological resilience may help explain part of that difference."

The paper is a hypothesis-generating framework intended to open new research directions and support more complete clinical conversations about complex facial pain.

Medical Hypotheses is an international peer-reviewed journal published by Elsevier focused on innovative and testable medical ideas.

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Free access to the article is available for a limited time: https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1n6Wz15pGcMzH6

A plain-language summary is available at: https://www.blueridgeclinic.com/trigeminal-triad-hypothesis-trigeminal-neuralgia/

About James C. Whittle James Whittle, M.S., L.Ac., is founder of Blue Ridge Acupuncture Clinic in Asheville, North Carolina, established in 2003. Called an "Expert in Chinese Medicine" by NBC News, he holds a clinical master's degree from Bastyr University, graduated with honors from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and completed eight months of clinical training in Chinese hospitals as a graduate of the Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine internship program. Over more than two decades of practice, he has treated thousands of patients with chronic pain and complex conditions. His work integrates classical Chinese medical theory with contemporary research in systems medicine, sleep physiology, and neurovascular disorders.

Media Contact: James C. Whittle, M.S., L.Ac. Blue Ridge Acupuncture Clinic Asheville, NC (828) 254-4405 https://www.blueridgeclinic.com

Source: Blue Ridge Clinic

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