1B headache Flashcards
What is a headache?
- A symptom
- 1/2 to 3/4 of adults aged 18-65 years in the world have had headache in the last year and among them, >30% have reported migraines
What is the diagnostic criteria for headaches?
- Primary: migraines, tension type, trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias (cluster headaches)
- Secondary: headache is precipitated by another condition/disorder- local or systemic. Serious causes of secondary headaches are uncommon.
What are the red flags suggesting secondary headache?
- Age: new onset or different headaches in a person (>50yrs)
- Onset: sudden, abrupt onset of a severe headache (thunderclap headache)
- Systemic symptoms: fever, neck stiffness, rash, weight loss
- Neurological signs: confusion, impaired consciousness, focal neurology, swollen optic discs
Therefore, the history is key to the diagnosis of primary vs secondary headaches
What are the red flags for headaches in general?
- Onset: thunderclap, acute, subacute
- Meningism
- Systemic symptoms
- Neurological symptoms or focal signs
- Orthostatic: headache is better when lying down
- Strictly unilateral
What are red flag neurological symptoms or focal signs of headache?
- Visual loss
- Double vision
- Confusion
- Seizures
- Hemiparesis: weakness/inability to move one side of body
- Papilloedema: optic disc swelling secondary to elevated intracranial pressure
- 3rd nerve (oculomotor palsy)
- Horner syndrome
What are the symptoms of an irritated meninges?
- Photophobia
- Phonophobia
- Stiff neck
- Vomiting
What is oculomotor palsy?
- If posterior communicating artery aneurysm happens, it can rupture and haemorrhage which is very close to third nerve
- 3rd nerve innervates levator muscle so palsy would cause droopy eyelid
- 3rd nerve causes pupil constriction, so palsy causes dilated pupil
- 3rd nerve also controls all eye muscles except lateral rectus and superior oblique- palsy causes eye to point outwards
What is Horner syndrome?
- When sympathetic supply to eye is affected
- Eye looks a bit droopy
- Eye looks pushed in bit
- Pupil is smaller on the affected side than the other
What is the basis for generation of headaches?
- Some structural
- Some perhaps pharmacological e.g. GTN for angina dilates vessels around heart to relax them but also does it around brain causing banging headache
- Some psychological
What is a migraine?
- A disorder of a tendency of repeated attacks of headaches
- These headaches are triggered
- Tends to be hemicranial- affecting half of head
What are the common symptoms of a migraine?
- Visual vertigo
- Motion sickness
- Easily hung over
What are the 3 forms a migraine can come in?
- Pain
- Focal symptoms- aphasia/ pins and needles/ tingling/ weakness
- Pain and focal symptoms
What are the phases of a migraine?
- Prodrome
- Aura
- Headache
- Resolution
- Recovery
What symptoms are in prodrome?
- Changes in mood
- Urination
- Fluid retention
- Food craving
- Yawning
What is aura?
Positive and negative visual and sensory phenomena
- Numbness/paraesthesia
- Weakness
- Speech arrest
What does the headache actually encompass?
- Head and body pain
- Nausea
- Photophobia
What is the resolution stage?
Rest and sleep
What small issues are involved in recovery of migraines?
- Mood disturbed
- Food intolerance
- Feeling hungover
Over what time period do the stages of a migraine happen?
48 hours or so, but a lot of individual variability (from 1 day to 5/6)
What are the symptoms of an aura?
- Positive and negative symptoms together
- Positive- flashes of light, zigzags, scintillations
- Negative- blind spot