HA Overview Flashcards
ICHD-3 classification of primary HA
- Migraine
- TTH
- Cluster HA
- Trigeminal Autonomic Cephalalgias (TAC)
ICHD-3 classification of secondary HA
- Trauma or injury to head/neck
- Cranial or cervical vascular disorder
- Non-vascular intracranial disorder
- Infection
- Homeostasis disorder
- HA/facial pain attributed to disorder of facial/cervical structures
- Psychiatric disorder
Name the two main nerves implicated in the pathology of headaches
How are they implicated?
- Greater occipital nerve
- Trigeminal nerve (5th cranial nerve, from trigeminal ganglion, connects to brainstem, supplies face and head)
These pain-sensing nerves can be set off by stress, muscle tension, enlarged blood vessels, and other triggers.
Once activated, the nerves send messages to the brain, causing headache
Headache pathophysiology
- Vasodilation of intracranial extracerebral blood vessels, activation of trigeminal nerves that release vasoactive neuropeptides to promote neurogenic inflammation
- Central pain transmission may activate other brainstem nuclei: associated symptoms (N/V, photo/phonophobia)
Describe general pathophysiology, assign TTH/migraine to likely pathophysiology
- Myofascial mechanism - tenderness, inflammation (Peripheral sensitization) - TTH
- Vascular mechanism - incr blood flow in cerebral arteries (Peripheral sensitization) - migraine
- Central mechanism - dysfunction in descending pain modulation (central sensitization) - progress to chronic TTH
- Genetic predisposition (gene polymorphism)
Red flags for secondary headache (SNNOOP10)
- Systemic symptoms
- Neoplasm
- Neurologic deficit (e.g., stroke) - can include vascular or nonvascular intracranial disorders (always look at symmetry)
- Onset of HA is sudden/abrupt
- Older age (>50y)
- Pattern change/recent onset
- Positional HA
- Precipitated by sneezing, coughing, exercise, valsalva maneuver (intracranial pressure)
- Papilledema (optic disc swelling due to incr intracranial pressure)
- Progressive HA w atypical presentation
- Pregnancy or puerperium (6 weeks after childbirth)
- Painful eye w autonomic features - more common in cluster HA
- Post traumatic onset of HA
- Pathology of immune system - immunocompromised
- Painkiller overuse / new drug at onset of HA - MOH
Describe cluster headache
- Presentation
- Severity
- Aggravation
- Other symptoms
- Duration
- Frequency
- Unilateral (usually around eyes)
- Severe pain
- Restlessness, agitation
- Cranial autonomic symptoms in same side as headache (red, watery, swollen eye, nasal congestion, runny nose, sweating, eyelid edema or drooping, constricted pupils)
- 15-180min
- Frequent during clusters
- Affect men > women
Describe TTH
- Presentation
- Severity
- Aggravation
- Other symptoms
- Duration
- Frequency
- Bilateral
- Pressing/tightening/band like, non-pulsatile
- Mild-mod pain
- Not aggravated by routine activities of daily living
- 30min - 7 days
- Infrequent to daily
- Affect women > men
Describe migraine
- Presentation
- Severity
- Aggravation
- Other symptoms
- Duration
- Frequency
- Unilateral
- Pulsating/throbbing
- Mod-severe
- Aggravated by or causes avoidance of routine activities of daily living
- N/V, photophobia, photophobia, aura, allodynia
- 4h-72h
- Recurrent with variable frequency
- Affect women 2-3x > men
mild-mod-severe scale
Mild: 1-3
Mod: 4-6
Severe: 7-10