Headaches Flashcards
Headaches are a common symptom experienced by 90% of individuals living in developed countries. Headaches are the presenting complaint for 2% of all primary care office visits and 3% of ED visits in the US.
Average age for all patients presenting with headache is 37 years with a female to male ratio of 3:1. The estimated annual medical cost for the diagnosis and treatment of headache in the US is $15 billion.
Headaches may be categorized by one or more classification systems. The two most useful include:
the International Headache Society Classification into primary and secondary headaches. The distinguishing feature between the primary and secondary classification is the absence or presence of an underlying structural or metabolic cause for the headache.
A more practical classification exploits the temporal mode of onset and progression for symptoms and signs. Headaches with acute onset and rapid progression versus those with more gradual onset and progression.
What are the main causes of primary HAs?
ØMigraine
Ø Cluster
Ø Tension (Episodic & Chronic)
Ø Miscellaneous
What are the main causes of secondary HAs?
ØBrain tumor
Ø Meningitis/Encephalitis
Ø Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (Pseudotumor cerebri)
Ø Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Ø Giant cell (temporal) arteritis
Ø Cerebral vein thrombosis
Ø Post-traumatic headache
Ø Others
This slide presents a PARTIAL LIST of headaches that typically have an acute onset
This slide presents a PARTIAL LIST of headaches that typically have a subacute onset. Note that the more common Primary Headaches fall into this category.
What is the pathophysiology of headache?
All headaches share a final common pathway producing head pain that results in inflammation or physical traction of pain sensitive structures within or around the cranial vault.
Recall that the brain parenchyma has no pain sensitive receptors and thus is insensitive to pain. However, recognize that mechanical or electrical stimulation of the thalamus or the descending nucleus of V in the brainstem will trigger a pain response.
Most of the pain sensitive structures, that is those with pain receptors, are located where?
in the dura/meninges and large/medium-sized arteries that lie at the base of the brain.
The venous sinuses and skull periosteum are other intracranial pain sensitive structures.
Many extracranial structures including the skin, nasal sinuses, teeth, eyes, cranial and cervical muscles all contain pain receptors.
Stimulation of cranial pain receptors is transmitted centrally largely through:
CN V, IX, and cervical roots C2-3. CNs VII and X contribute but less so.
What innervates most pain sensitive structures above and including the tentorium as well as extracranial structures above the eyes?
the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve
CN IX, X, not shown in this figure, and cervical roots C2-3 innervate pain sensitive structures where?
of the posterior fossa, the posterior scalp and neck.
The first synapse for these pain pathways are in the descending nucleus of V, usually called the trigeminal nucleus caudalis in the headache literature, and in the dorsal horn of the upper cervical spinal cord with which it is contiguous.
Recall that the substantia gelatinosa and tract of Lissauer merge with the descending nucleus of V and its descending tract of V to produce one continuous system. The nucleus sends nerve fibers across the midline to form the trigeminothalamic tract to synapse in the VPM nucleus of the thalamus as part of the Lateral Pain System.
Pain signals are then relayed on to the sensory cortex and other cortical sensory systems. The trigeminal nucleus caudalis also send collaterals to the autonomic nuclei in the brainstem and to the hypothalamus to inform the Medial Pain System.
Polysynaptic connections between the trigeminal nucleus caudalis and the superior salivatory nucleus are believed to be responsible for ipsilateral autonomic changes that can accompany certain headaches, including red eye, tearing and rhinorrhea.
The trigeminal nucleus caudalis can be considered THE structure for anatomic and physiologic convergence of pain sensations. Hence pain from the face may be referred to the neck and vice versa, especially when the ophthalmic branch of CN V or V1 is involved.
The ipsilateral greater occipital nerve, carrying C2 sensory input, is often tender in an attack of migraine or cluster headache. Anesthetizing the nerve locally can sometimes terminate the attack. It is less clear if it is the blockade of specific sensory input that improves headache or a more generic reduction of overall input to the trigeminal nucleus caudalis that improves the headache. Numbing up other large areas of the head can also have a similar beneficial effect.
Most headaches have no serious underlying structural or metabolic cause (i.e. primary). However, the physician must consider that there may be a serious etiology when the patient tells you “Doctor, I have a bad headache.”
This slide lists some of the more prominent RED FLAGS that may signal an underlying secondary etiology for the headache.
What are migraines?
Chronic neurological disorder causing recurrent headaches with some or all of the following features:
§ Frequently unilateral, may be bilateral or switch sides
§ Pulsating
§ Moderate to severe intensity
§ Duration of 4 – 72 hours
§ Nausea with or without vomiting
§ Photophobia and/or phonophobia
§ May be preceded by a prodromal phase
§ May be preceded by an aura in ~ 20% migraineurs
§ “Triggers” or precipitating factors are frequent
§ Frequent family history
Migraine is more than just head pain. Migraine is a process that can start long before head pain begins. The process of headache is generally believed to come in phases: describe them.
pre-headache, that is prodrome and aura, headache, and post-headache.
The migraine process can begin at any phase, and not all phases present themselves in every migraine attack. The process of migraine can also stop at any phase. Sometimes, migraineurs experience an aura but the headache never develops. This is relatively common with visual aura in the older population. The variability inherent in the migraine process and symptoms makes multiple migraine treatment options very important.
How common is migraine prodrome?
The migraine prodrome is not experienced by all migraineurs, but in those who recognize these early symptoms, they are helpful in providing a warning of an impending headache and that allows the patient to take preemptive measures to abort the headache.
How might migraine prodrome present?
• It is a vague constellation of symptoms that may include:
§ mood swings (depression, anxiety, irritability)
§ odd food cravings
§ malaise or vague feeling of un-wellness
§ fatigue
§ muscle aches and stiffness
The migraine aura, like the prodrome, is not experienced by all migraineurs. In fact only 20% of migraineurs have clearly defined auras.
While you may be familiar with the visual migraine aura, auras may present in a variety of ways, all of which depend upon what part of the brain is being affected by a wave of “cortical spreading depression” causing these symptoms.
Auras may present, for example, as transient sensory symptoms, as transient limb weakness, or as transient aphasia.
Auras can mimic the symptoms of transient ischemic attacks (TIAs) and at the outset, they often provoke a workup and treatment as if they were TIAs.
More typically, a migraine aura affects the occipital (visual) cortex and causes a spreading zigzag line to migrate across the visual field that is then replaced by an scotoma, that is, a transient absence or hole in vision. The zigzag lines are called what?
“fortification spectra” named after medieval forts that had zigzagging walls around them. The figures below presents artistic renditions of visual auras. Note the small round white spots (scotomas) in the left hand figure.
Be aware however that scotomas more often than not, do not involve white or black spots, but an absence of vision. What is that like?
Think about the blind spot in your field of vision due to the optic nerve’s entry into the retina. You probably didn’t even know you had such a spot. By the way, if you want to detect your own blind spot, take a red match, white cotton tipped applicator or even a pencil with an eraser end, look straight ahead and move the match at arms length horizontally about 15 degrees lateral of the midline for the eye being tested. Explore this area with small movements of the match, and at some point, you will see it disappear and reappear. Once gone, move the match up and down and in other directions to map out the extent of your blind spot. It is a rather amazing phenomenon the first time you recognize your eye has a hole in its field of vision.
Many migraineurs recognize specific circumstances such as missing a meal, inadequate or too much sleep, red wines, certain nuts, chocolates, other foods, and smells, and so on, that can ‘trigger’ a migraine attack. This and the next two slides present some of these triggers in a graphic manner.
A frequent trigger that fits under the diet heading is monosodium glutamate. MSG is present as a taste enhancer in many foods, especially some Chinese dishes leading to the term “Chinese Headache”.
Emotional swings may trigger a migraine.
How common are migraines?
Migraine affects a huge proportion of the population with women being affected 2-3 times more frequently than men. Migraine carries a strong family history and its inheritance is thought to be polygenic. One rare form of migraine, Familial Hemiplegic Migraine, is caused by dominantly inherited genetic abnormalities at several different loci.
The anatomical substrate for all migraine and many other causes of headache is:
the Trigeminovascular System involving CN V1 innervation of pain receptors located in the dura, meninges, and medium/large cerebral arteries and veins that lie on the surface of the brain and above the tentorium.
This slide demonstrates the extracranial innervation of the trigeminal nerve and the C2, C3 nerve roots.
This slide is a refresher for the pain sensitive pathways responsible for transmission of head pain
This slide highlights CN VII and the parasympathetic innervation of the Superior salivatory nucleus. Vasodilation and other parasympathetic symptoms associated with migraine reflect central connections between pain pathways from CN V and the superior salivatory nucleus.
This slide presents several other brainstem nuclei important in the pathogenesis of migraine including the magnus raphe, locus ceruleus, and dorsal raphe nuclei. These latter nuclei are FYI and will not be discussed further. However, this slide more clearly depicts the important connection between the trigeminal nucleus caudalis (shown in orange with the yellow afferent pathway) and the superior salivatory nucleus (green with the green efferent pathway to blood vessels). The afferent/efferent system comprises the trigeminovascular system that is responsible for mediating the vascular changes associated with migraine.