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
What kind of shapes do people with aura see?
- Expanding C’s
- Elemental visual disturbance: little patch that grows in their vision and moves towards periphery of vision and disappears- why does this happen?
Migraine is caused by spreading electrical depression across the cerebral cortex and as it goes across the visual cortex you get the expansion and movement of the migraine aura image
What is the treatment for an acute attack of migraine?
- Painkillers
- Metoclopramide (anti-emetic to stop the sickness)
- Triptans- painkillers we use just for migraines
- Opiates
- A short nap
- TMS (transcranial magnetic stimulation)
What painkillers can be taken for an acute attack of migraine?
Aspirin/ibuprofen (non-steroidal) and paracetamol
How does metoclopramide work?
It’s a prokinetic agent and it stimulates peristalsis
Migraine causes gastric paresis which causes gut to slow down and causes nausea- would also mean ingested tablets would just sit there and not be digested