5 - Common Neurological Disorders 2 Flashcards
All dementia syndromes and stroke will be covered in detail in…..
OPIC
When somebody presents with a headache, what differentials should you think of?
IMPORTANT
How do you take a history for the present complaint of a headache?
(NB - OSCEs)
- Site: Band like, unilateral, temporal
- Onset: Sudden, gradual
- Character: Throbbing, stabbing
- Radiation: Ear, neck, back
- Associated Symptoms: Eye pain, blurred vision, jaw claudication, lacrimation, aura, photophobia, non-blanching rash, rhinorrhea, fever, N+V
- Timing: Recur? Seconds? Hours? Progressively worsen? Head trauma at the time? What else doing at time?
- Exacerbating/Relieving Factors: Analgesia, Sex, Food (e.g cheese, chocolate, coffee)
- Severity: 1 to 10
- RED FLAGS
- Systems Review: General, Neurological, Fundoscopy
- PMHx: Cancer, HTN, ADPKD
- DHx + Allergies: COCP
- FHx: Migraines
- SHx: Stress, smoking alcohol
- ICE
What differentials should you think of for a rapid onset headache and a gradual onset headache?
Rapid: SAH, Meningitis, Encephalitis
Gradual: Venous sinus thrombosis, Sinusitis
If a patient has a chronic progressive headache, what differential should you consider?
Raised ICP, especially if worse on waking/bending forward/coughing and papilloedema
LP contraindicated until CT
What are some red flags with a headache that mean there may be an underlying sinister pathology? e.g raised ICP or Intracranial Haemorrhage
SSNOOPPPP
- Fever, photophobia or neck stiffness (meningitis or encephalitis)
- New neurological symptoms (haemorrhage, malignancy or stroke)
- Dizziness (stroke)
- Visual disturbance (temporal arteritis or glaucoma)
- Sudden onset occipital headache (subarachnoid haemorrhage)
- Worse on coughing or straining (raised intracranial pressure)
- Postural, worse on standing, lying or bending over (raised ICP)
- Severe enough to wake the patient from sleep
- Vomiting (raised intracranial pressure or carbon monoxide poisoning)
- History of trauma (intracranial haemorrhage)
- Pregnancy (pre-eclampsia)
What examinations should you do when a patient presents with a headache?
General: Rashes, Bruising
Neurological: see image
Fundoscopy: May show Papilloedema if raised ICP from tumour, bleed or BIH
What are some primary and secondary headaches?
What are some primary and secondary headaches?
Secondary headaches give a similar presentation to a tension headache but with a clear cause. They produce a non-specific headache secondary to:
- Underlying medical conditions such as infection, obstructive sleep apnoea or pre-eclampsia
- Alcohol
- Head injury
- Carbon monoxide poisoning
What are the following for Cluster headaches (primary headache disorder):
- Symptoms
- Epidemiology
- Diagnosis/Ix
- Mx
- Prevention
Can also try steroids and lithium for prevention
If refractory after treatment can try deep brain stimulation, greater occipital nerve blocks and trigeminal nerve compression
What are trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias?
Collection of primary headache disorders with unilateral headache and parasympathetic autonomic features
Causes: cluster headache, paroxysmal hemicrania, short-lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache and hemicrania continua
What is the diagnostic criteria for cluster headaches?
What are the following for Tension Headaches:
- Symptoms
- Epidemiology
- Diagnosis/Ix
- Mx
- Prevention
What are some red flags associated with headaches?
What is a medication overuse headache?
Headache occurring on 15 or more days/month in a patient with a pre-existing primary headache and developing as a consequence of regular overuse of acute or symptomatic headache medication (on 10 or more or 15 or more days/month, depending on the medication) for more than 3 months. It usually, but not invariably, resolves after the overuse is stopped