headache Flashcards
What could cause an acute single headache?
Illness, sinusitis, head injury, subarachnoid haemorrhage, meningitis, drugs, toxins, stroke, thunderclap headache
What could cause a dull headache increasing in severity?
Medication overuse, HRT, contraceptives, temporal arteritis, benign intracranial hypertension, tumour, cerebral venous sinus thrombosis
What could cause a dull headache unchanged over months?
Chronic tension headache, cerebral venous sinus thrombosis
What could cause a triggered headache?
Coughing, sex, exertion, strain, food & drink, sleep/lack of
What could cause a recurrent headache?
Migraines, cluster headache, episodic tension headache, trigeminal neuralgia, post-herpetic neuralgia
Which headaches do people complain most about and which are the worrying ones?
People complain more about dull unchanged headaches (chronic) or recurrent headaches. The worrying ones are the acute single headaches or those increasing in severity
What are red flags of headaches?
Acute/subacute onset eg. Thunderclap. Meningism symptoms (photophobia, phonophobia, stiff neck, vomiting), systemic symptoms (fever, rash, weight loss). Focal signs (visual loss, confusion, seizure, hemiparesis, diplopia, 3rd nerve palsy, horner’s syndromes, papilloedema), orthostatic headaches, strictly unilateral headache
What are some focal signs?
Double vision, horner syndrome, 3rd nerve (oculomotor) palsy
What causes double vision?
Damage to any of the 3 nerves that innervate muscles of the eye or muscles themselves
What is horner syndrome? Presentation?
Sympathetic supply to the eye is affected so the eye looks droopy, eyelid pushed in and the pupil is smaller: ptosis, miosis, anhidrosis, enopthalamus
What is 3rd nerve (oculomotor) palsy? What can cause it? Presentation?
Damage to the oculomotor nerve.
- Can happen because posterior communicating artery aneurysm can sit close to oculomotor nerve and rupture/haemorrgae.
- The signs are ptosis (droopy eyelid) and pupil dilation because nerve innervates levator muscle and constricts pupil - dilated pupil with eye pointing in wrong direction (out of alignment with the others)
How does a subarachnoid haemorrhage present? What can cause it?
- Sudden generalised headache usually at back of head.
- Presents with meningism (stiff neck, photophobia) because blood in subarachnoid space irritates meninges.
- Can be due to ruptured aneurysm, arteriovenous malformations etc.
What drug should you give for subarachnoid haemorrhage?
Nimodipine & try to control BP to prevent further bleeds
How to diagnose subarachnoid haemorrhage? What do you see in each investigation?
CT brain (see white blood - acute bleeding). Lumbar puncture (pink/red spinal fluid, RBC and xanthochromia - yellow discolouration due to bilirubin) indicating haemorrhage. MRA & angiogram if blood obscuring anatomy
How do they coil aneurysm?
Catheter through vessel in groin, feed up through cerebral arteries and fill it with platinum coils to sclerose/seal aneurysm
How can acute intracerebral bleed become fatal?
Can cause a large bleed which increases intra-cranial pressure. Brain can start seep under areas of weakness (coning) eg. Falcine herniation or tentorial herniation or herniation through foramen magnum, meaning that brain squeezes out of the skull. Once brainstem is affected it can be terminal.
What is papilloedema and what is it caused by?
Optic disc swelling due to raised intra-cranial pressure (swelling at back of eye)
What are carotid & vertebral artery dissections? What do they cause? Which are more common and what can they result from?
These vessels have layers of tissue which can split and collect blood between them causing turbulent flow. They cause headache and neck pain, and potentially stroke (due to blood clot risk). Carotid dissections more common, can happen due to trauma (eg car accidents)
Who is predisposed to dissections?
People with ehlers danlos syndrome (collagen problem)
how is diagnosis of dissections made?
MRI/MRA, doppler, angiography
What is treatment for dissections?
Aspirin or anticoagulants x 6 months to prevent clot & stroke.
Where is headache in vertebral artery dissection
Occipital headache (back of head and neck)
Where is headache in carotid artery dissection?
Phantom of opera distribution (around eyes/forehead)
What can cause chronic subdural haemorrhage?
Slow venous bleed (veins thin so easy bleed). Common in elderly due to falls, or due to anticoagulants (thin blood)
What seen on CT of chronic subdural bleed?
Black blood & hypodense
What can a significant subdural bleed cause and how is this treated?
Can cause falcine herniation (brain pushed over to other side). Drill hole and drain blood.
Who most commonly gets temporal arteritis?
Women over 55
What does temporal arteritis cause?
Inflammation of the temporal arteries so constant unilateral headache and tender scalps, jaw pain, shoulder tenderness
How can temporal arteritis cause blindness?
Involvement of posterior ciliary arteries
What is seen on blood test of temporal arteritis?
Elevated inflammatory markers - ESR and CRP
How do temporal arteries look? What does biopsy show?
Inflamed and tortuous. Disruption of internal elastic lamina. Biopsy shows inflammation & giant cells (with lots of nuclei)
What drugs for temporal arteritis?
High dose steroids & aspirin
What is cerebral venous thrombosis and its pathophysiology?
Blood clot in dural venous sinus or cerebral vein (DVT of brain). Big headache because raised ICP (blocked veins, so blood cannot get out of brain - build up - high ICP). These veins are fragile so can haemorrhage with blocks.
What are causes of cerebral venous thrombosis?
Thrombophilia, pregnancy, dehydration, behcet’s disease
What are causes of meningitis?
Infections or malignancies (seeding of cancer cells In meninges)