Headache Flashcards

1
Q

What is the epidemiology of headaches?

A

In top 10 of primary care symptoms (>4% GP consultations)

Accounts for 30% of neurology referrals

Estimated to cost >£6 billion per year in UK (service costs, loss of employment)

70% of headache in primary care not given a diagnostic label

40% of population have tension headache at any time

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2
Q

How many headaches is there and what are the most common and most serious types?

A

There are over 200 types of headache

Most common;
- Migrane
- Cervicogenic (neck caused)
- Systemic illness
- Analgesia overuse
- Muscular tension
(these are quite mild and none should kill you)

Serious;
- Subarachnoid haemorrhage
- Low intercranial pressure
- Cerebral Venus sinus thrombosis (drainage block)
- Temporal arteritis
- Infection (meningitis)
- Rased intercranial pressure

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3
Q

What questions should we be asking in a headache history?

A

SOCRATES

  • Position on head?
  • How long?
  • Character (not intensity)? (pressure?, dislike of light/noise?)
  • Radiation
  • Nausea/vomiting + Other neurological symptoms (double vision)
  • Frequency + Diurnal variation (worse in morning or as day goes on?)
  • Postural? (worse lying down?)

Previous Medical history, family history (e.g inflammatory bowel syndrome linked to venous sinus thrombosis)

Medicines (how often - more than 15 days/month - analgesic abuse headache?)

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4
Q

What are the symptoms and treatments of a tension headache?

A

Tension headache;

  • Weeks, months, years
  • “tightness”, “pressure” round the head
  • Constant, or worse toward evening (Makes sense as tension built up over day)
  • Often there is frequently used analgesia (using medication too much)
  • Rarely presents with nausea

Treatments;
- reassurance around severity and duration
- Wont go away overnight
- Explain muscles around head
- Use relaxation exercises
- Reduce analgesia
- Low dose amitriptyline (10-20mg) normally anti-depressant at 150+mg

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5
Q

What are the symptoms of Migraine ?

A
  • Classically on one side at a time
  • Pulse, sharp character
  • Most headache with nausea will be migraine!
  • Photophobia, photophobia, gut symptoms (IBS may be a form of gut migraine - responds to amitriptyline)
  • More common in women, especially mid-cycle, and newly at menopause (oestrogen)

Can be +/- Aura - What is an aura?
- can be visual, weakness or sensory and spreads over minutes
- Can look similar to hemiplegia from stroke
- Can have black and white Scotoma - NB coloured scotoma = danger sign as is associated with epilepsy

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6
Q

What are the causes of Migraine’s?

A

Mechanism unclear, vascular and neural theories (Reduced blood flow and overactive neurons)

Look for triggers (e.g foods, alcohol, beginning or end of working week)

Maybe exacerbated by physical activity or a bang on the head

Often there is a family history

Keep a diary to help decide pattern and treatments

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7
Q

What are the treatments for Acute migraine’s?

A

Actue treatments;
- Aspirin, paracetamol
- Anti-nausea (prochlorperazine, metoclopramide)

Best treatments are;

Triptans - agonists at 5HT-1b and 5HT-1d receptors
- and related family of drugs Suma, Riza, Nara, Zolmi-triptan etc.

Note may need a variety of delivery methods to combat nausea and vomiting (e.g melts, injection or nasal spray) - available without prescription but expensive

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8
Q

What are the treatments for Prophylactic migraines?

A

Prophylactic migraines if events occur >2 per month -

rotate schedules of different meds as after a while become less effective!

Medications;
- Beta blockers (e.g propranolol) commonest use - unless asthmatic
- Low dose amitriptyline
- Pizotifen (5HT-2a and 2c antagonist, antihistamine, anticholinergic)

  • Topiramate - anti epileptic also
  • Sodium valproate anti epileptic also
    ( These 2 are sodium channel blockers, reducing excitatory)
  • Candesartan - angiotensin receptor action - reduced BP
  • Flunarazine - Ca channel blocker - reduced BP
  • Lisinopril: ACE inhibitor - reduced BP
  • Methysergide (Ergot derivative - with a retroperitoneal fibrosis side effect) - Last resort
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9
Q

What are some other treatments for migraines?

A
  • Botulnum toxin injection (usually every 90 days) approved in the UK
  • Anti-CGRP monoclonal antibodies, erenumab, licensed in 2018 for > 4 migraines/month UK, (s/c monthly injection), must have tried at least 3 other prophylactics (expensive so thats why)
  • Acupuncture (effects not shown)
  • Women with migrane and aura should not use combined OCP due to stroke risk
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10
Q

What are Trigeminal Autonomic Cephalagia (TAC)

A

Trigeminal Autonomic Cephalagia (TAC)
- Rare condition

Commonest of these is cluster headache;
- Unilateral - often around the eye
- Striking circadian rhythm, same time of day (e.g 4-5pm)
- Clustering in periods usually of a few weeks then goes - until next time

Presents;
- Recurrent pain in trigeminal distribution with
- Autonomic features (eye watering, nasal congestion, redness eye)
- More common in males (3:1)

Paroxysmal hemicrania
- More common in women
- Shorter, more frequent attacks
- Responds to indomethacin (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory) so is a differentiator between cluster headache and paroxysmal hemicrania

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11
Q

What are the treatment options for Trigeminal Autonomic Cephalagia (TAC)?

A

Triptans

Oxygen - High dose

High dose verapamil (up to 960mg/day) - Ca channel blocker at very high doses (causes vasodilation)

Indomethacin for P Hemicrania

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12
Q

What are the features of a Medication overuse headache ?

A

Presents as;
- Present for >15 days/month
- Worsened while analgesia has been used

Common where;
- Patient using simple analgesia > 15 days/month, or
- 10 > days for other acute e.g triptans

Uncertain whether abrupt cessation of gradual stopping is better for treatment - patient will suffer headache during withdrawal

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13
Q

What are the features of a Thurderclap headache

A

Instant or rapidly appearing (<60 seconds), very severe pain

Must consider;

  • Sub-arachnoid Haemorrhage, .e stroke commonly from leaking aneurism - similar presentation

Requires urgent investigation
- CT head looking for blood immediate
- Lumbar Puncture after 12 hours, look for blood or bilirubin and oxyhaemaglobin in CSF

Can be exertional (coital cephalgia - during sex)
- type of migraine from vasospasm, quickly reversible and comes back is reassuring (you know its reversible)

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14
Q

What are the 2 types of early morning headaches and their features?

A

Cervicogenic (arising from the neck)
- poor posture in bed, pillow bends neck. Anatomical position is best
- Over exertion of neck muscles
- Spinal degeneration (spondylosis)
- Usually muscular if not presenting with neurological compromise (reflex loss, weakness etc)
- Break pain/spasm cycle - anti-inflammatory or pain treatment

Sleep apnoea with CO2 retention;
- Obesity
- History snoring (common with alcohol)
- tested by monitoring chest movements
- treated with +ve pressure oxygen

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15
Q

What are the features of Raised Intracranial pressure?

A

SERIOUS

Presents;
- Headache (usually mild)
- Diurnal variation (worse in morning= Bad sign!, often gone by lunchtime)
- Often mild nausea

These mild symptoms are often dismissed

Neurological features - look for bilateral papilloedema - tumours rare presents as headache only, could be access or CSF blockage

Treatment;
- requires a scan urgently and referral

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16
Q

What are the features of infections (meningitis)?

A

Presents as;
- fever
- photophobia
- neck stiffness
- altered consciousness (encephalitis)
- petechial rash from meningococcal meningitis (can lead to purpuric area and on to amputation)

Treatments;
- most meningitis is viral, but cannot distinguish clinically so treat with Ceftriaxone/cefotaxime or benzyl penicillin

17
Q

What are the features of Temporal arteritis

A

Relatively rare condition, presentation;
- Never occurs below 50 years of age
- Jaw claudication (jaw pain on chewing)
- Maybe features of poly myalgia (tired, stiff in morning) then temporal headache
- Can cause blindness through embolism into the eye

Tests;
- palpate temporal arteries for tenderness (if you feel pulsations and its not tender, unlikely to be temporal arteritis but still)
- Check for Raised Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate (ESR>50)
- Can use ultrasound or temporal artery biopsy (sample error) for inflammation

Management;
- Use high dose steroids early (osteoporosis, hypertension, muscle wasting, truncal obesity) - problems getting off them

18
Q

What are the features of cerebral venous sinus thrombosis ?

A

Presentation & referral;
- Often female, on oral contraceptive pill
- Headache, often severe
- Raised intracranial pressure
- Often papilloedema and seizures
- Maybe MR bilateral, haemorrhage and
- empty delta sign
- Refer on to neurosurgical centre