Headache Flashcards
Red flags for headache
- Acute and severe
- Progressive chronic headaches
- Focal neurology
- Age under 3yrs
- Headache/vomiting on waking
- Consistent location of recurrent headaches
- Presence of VP shunt
- Hypertension
What are the commonest types of recurrent headaches?
- Tension-type Headaches (~50% incidence):
- Non-pulsatile band
- Often end of day
- Few associated symptoms
- Migraines (~25%):
- Pulsing pain
- Nausea
- Photophobia
- Phonophonia
- Often unilateral
6 causes of headache other than tension/migraine
-
1) Fever without associated meningism
- URTI
- Pneumonia
- Septicaemia
-
2) Local sinusitis
- Focal facial tenderness
- Otitis media
-
3) History of recent head injury
- Consider concussion
-
4) Meningitis
- Irritability
- Decreased consciousness
- Petechiae/purpura
- Photophobia/neckstiffness
- Nb: classic signs less common in paediatric population
-
5) SAH
- Sudden onset (“thunderclap”)
- Vomiting
- Often occipital
- 6) Rebound/overuse headache
What tools are used for assessing headache?
- Headache Patterns
- HEADSS (Home/Education/Activities/Drugs/Sexuality/ Suicide&depression)
- International Headache Society: Guidelines
What sort of finding warrant investigation?
- Abnormal neurology
- Meningism (consider LP)
- Marked changes in behaviour
- Symptoms of raised intracranial pressure
- Increasing frequency of undiagnosed headaches
- Onset of severe headach
Describe the different patterns of headache
a) Acute recurrent
- Migraine (common, classical, complicated)
b) Chronic non-progressive
- Tension
- Anxiety
- Depression
- Somatisation
c) Chronic progressive
- Tumour
- Benign intracranial hypertension
- Brain abcess
- Hydrocephalus
d) Acute on Chronic non-progressive
- Tension headache with coexistant migraine
Management of headache vs migraine?
Safety netting advice for child with headache
See your doctor if:
- the headaches are getting worse
- they are waking your child up from sleep
- they are worse in the morning
- your child has persistent vomiting
- you notice changes in your child’s behaviour or personality
What are the commonest organisms causing bacterial meningitis in children over 2 months of age
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Neisseria meningitidis
- Haemophilus influenzae type B (in unimmunised children)
What are some organisms to consider in meningitis in infants less than 2 months of age?
- Group B streptococcus
- E. coli and other Gram-negative organisms
- Listeria monocytogenes
- Streptococcus pneumoniae
- Neisseria meningitidis
- Haemophilus influenzae type B (in unimmunised children)
Causes of encephalitis?
- Enterovirus
- HSV
- Other herpes viruses (EBV, CMV, HHV6, VZV)
- Arboviruses.
- Less commonly, encephalitis can be caused by bacteria, fungi or parasites.
Common clinical picture of a child with meningitis?
- Infants with meningitis frequently present with non-specific symptoms such as fever, irritability, lethargy, poor feeding, vomiting and diarrhoea
- Older children may complain of headache or photophobia
- Seizures
- Prior antibiotics - clinical presentation may be altered by prior use of antibiotics.
EXAMINATION
- In infants, the fontanelle may be full
- Neck stiffness may or may not be present (not a reliable sign in young children)
- A purpuric rash is suggestive of meningococcal septicaemia
- Kernig’s sign: hip flexion with an extended knee causes pain in the back and legs
- CSF shunts, spinal and cranial abnormalities (eg dermal sinuses) which may have predisposed a child to meningitis
- Signs of encephalitis: altered conscious state, focal neurological signs
Investigations for meningitis?
- Lumbar puncture (LP)Prior to performing a LP
- discuss with a senior registrar or consultant.
- Sterilisation of the CSF can occur within 2 hours after a dose of Ceftriaxone 50 mg/kg/dose (2g) iv 12H /Ceftriaxone for N. meningitidis and within 4 hours for S. pneumoniae
- Blood tests
- Full blood count/differential
- Glucose, urea and electrolytes
- Blood cultures
What is the initial management of meningitis?
<2 months
- Cefotaxime 50 mg/kg (max 2g) iv 6H AND
- Benzylpenicillin* 60 mg/kg iv
- 12H (wk 1 of life)
- 6-8H (wk 2-4 of life)
- 4H (>4 weeks of life)
> 2 months
- Ceftriaxone 50 mg/kg/dose (2g) iv 12H
- Dexamethasone 0.15mg/kg IV 6 hourly for 4 days
If encephalitis is suspected on examination then give:
- Aciclovir