2. General conciderations : _ Headache is one of the most common neurological problems, in which the careful analysis of the details of history is particularly important. _ Duration of the headache may give clear idea of the seriousness of the und- erlying disease . _ sudden headache for the first time may be due to meningitis, intracranial hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage . _ Headache for years usually is psychogenic . _ Headache for weeks or months may suggest a progressive or an expanding intracranial lesion& require careful investigation. _ Pain sensitive structures both inside and outside the head receive their sensory innervation from the tigeminal, glossopharangeal and vagus nerves or from the upper three cervical nerves
3. General conciderations : cont. _If the headache is due to a lesion above tentorium pain is felt at the distribution of ophthalmic division of trigeminal nerve. _If the lesion is below tentorium the pain is referred to distribution of upper three cervical nerves or ninth or tenth cranial nerves _ the duration and frequency are important when the headache is periodic or recurrent, migraine may occur at regular intervals or confined to certain times, at premenstrual period and may be absent during pregnancy. _ Aggravating factors are important, headache of increased intracra- nial pressure is aggravated by change in posture or sudden movement also in vascular and post-concussional headache
4. General conciderations : cont. _Certain food, cheese , chocolate and hypoglycemia may bring on migraine, while rest will generally relieve vascular headache. _ The quality of pain also helpful, in migraine is throbbing, but in migrainous neuralgia may take the form of severe boring pain, while in tension headache is dull, pressing and band-like.
7. Character of pain Duration Location Comment Ice pick Stabbing Very brief (split-second) Variable, usually temporal or parietal Benign, more common in migraine Ice cream Sharp, severe 30-120 seconds Bitemporal/occipital Obvious trigger by cold stimuli Exertional/coital Bursting, thunderclap Severe for minutes then less severe for hours Generalised Subarachnoid haemorrhage needs exclusion Cough Bursting Seconds to minutes Occipital or generalised Intracranial pathology needs exclusion (especially cranio-cervical junction) Cluster headache (migrainous neuralgia) Severe unilateral, with ptosis, tearing, conjunctival injection, unilateral nasal congestion 30-90 minutes 1-3 times per day Periorbital Usually men, occurring in clusters over weeks/months Chronic paroxysmal hemicrania Severe unilateral with cluster headache-like autonomic features (above) 5-20 minutes, frequently through day Periorbital/temporal Usually women, responds to indometacin SUNCT* Severe, sharp, triggered by touch or neck movements 15-120 seconds, repetitive through day Periorbital May respond to carbamazepine
27. Tension headache _Its common, usually described as severe, continuous as sense of pressure or tightness rather than pain, usually on the vault or less frequently occipito-frontal and usually bilateral
28. Migraine _ migraine is very common and a wide variety of atypical and partial forms are seen. _ usually start at adolescence as recurrent headache lasting 2 hs to 2 days. _ the pain is usually unilateral associated with photophobia, nausea and vomiting. _ Many patients experience an aura before the pain usually visual disturbance as flashing lights, scotomata, or even hemianopia, paraesthesiae may occur around the angle of the mouth or in the hand.
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30. Tension type headache: diagnostic criteria A.At least 10 previous headache episodes meeting criteria B to D B.Lasting from 30 minutes to 7 days C. At least 2 of the following pain characteristics 1. Pressing/tightening (nonpulsating) quality 2. Mild or moderate intensity 3. Bilateral location 4. No aggravation by walking stairs D. Absence of both of the following 1. Nausea and vomiting 2. Photophobia and phonophobia
31. Tension type headache: diagnostic criteria Occasional TTH is seldom disabling (unlike chronic TTH) Both TTH and migraine are aggravated by stress (so can be hard to differentiate) Headache more often than once a week may be a mixture of TTH and migraine Successful management is dependent on recognition and management of each separate headache type
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33. Cluster headache: diagnostic criteria Formerly known as migrainous neuralgia Generally affects men (ratio 6:1), often smokers, in their 20s or older Typically occurs in bouts for 6-12 weeks every one or two years Attacks typically occur at night, waking the patient 1 to 2 hours after falling asleep, lasting 30 to 60 minutes Pain is intense, probably as severe as renal colic, and strictly unilateral
36. Cluster headache _Its much less common than migraine and more in males, onset usually at third decade. _Characterized by severe periodic unilateral periorbital pain with conjunctival injection, unilateral lacrimation, nasal congestion and partial horner`s syndrome _The pain is brief last 30-90 minutes. _ usually occur at early morning for weeks disappear for months followed by another cluster.
39. Headache of raised intracranial pressure : Cont. _Usually due to space occupying lesions, brain tumor, abscess, or haematoma. _Other causes of raised intracranial pressure, viral encephalitis, lead encephalopathy and malignant hypertension. _Severe headache occurs in meningeal irritation as in meningitis and subarachnoid haemorrhage which are associated with vomiting and neck rigidity.
42. Coital and exercise-induced headache _Usually middle-aged men develop sudden, severe headache at the climax of sexual intercourse last for 10-15 minutes, a milder headache may persist for few hours. _A similar headache may occur after unaccustommed exertion in unfit person.
43. Facial pain _Most patients with persisting facial pain have, trigeminal neuralgia, atypical facial pain or post-herpetic neuralgia. _ Trigeminal neuralgia causes very sharp lancinating pains in one division of trigeminal nerve in middle-aged and elderly patients the pain is severe, brief and repetitive make the patient to flinch. _Atypical facial pain is continuous and unremitting, centered over the maxilla most frequently on left side in middle-aged women. _ Post-herpetic neuralgia is continuous, felt as burning at affected territory which is sensitive to light touch and there is history of Herpes zoster.
44. HEADACHES IN OLD AGE Prevalence : less common in those aged over 60 years than in younger people. Common causes: trigeminal neuralgia, temporal arteritis and post-herpetic neuralgia, which occur rarely in younger patients. Migraine and tension headache: less common than in younger people. Raised intracranial pressure: not always associated with headache, vomiting or papilloedema because intracranial mass lesions can reach larger sizes before presentation, as the involutional process that occurs in ageing brains allows the accommodation of an expanding lesion more easily than in younger patients.