Headaches Flashcards
1
Q
Migrane
A
- unilateral throbbing
- more women affected than men (teen/young adults)
- you know the rest
2
Q
Tension headache
A
Gradual, constant, bilateral, dull, achind, squeezing
- slightly more prevalent in women
- associated with fatigue, pericranial muscle tenderness, and sleep disturbance
3
Q
Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias
A
Cluster, Paroxysmal Hemicrania, and SUNCT
- ipsilateral to headache you see autonomic changes such as:
- lacrimation, nasal congesion/rhinorrhea, eyelid edema, forehead/facial sweating, forehead/facial flushing, sensation of fullness in ear, and miosis and/or ptosis (Horner’s syndrome)
4
Q
Medication overuse headache
A
- risk factor: taking abortive meds more than 2x weekly
- headaches occur more than 15 days per month in pt with a preexisting headache disorder
- regular overuse for more than 3 months
- culprits: opioids, caffiene, excedrin, fioricet, triptans, ergotamine
5
Q
Low CSF Pressure Headache
A
- positional (only upon sitting or standing)
- can be from rupture Tarlov cyst
- self-limiting
- tx with IV fluids, IV caffiene, or epidural blood patch
- follows after LP
6
Q
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension
A
- AKA pseudotumor cerebri
- elevated ICP but no structural abnormality nor CSF outflow obstruction
- chronic headache (positional), tinnitus, overweight
- blurred vision with papilledema, diplopia (abducens nerve palsy)
- high opening pressure for LP
- need to rule out sinus venous thrombosis
7
Q
Chiari malformaion
A
- common syringomyelia in cervial SC
- tx: suboccipital craniectomy, C1 ring laminectomy
- occipital/upper cervical headache w. Valsalva
- neck/shoulder/back cape pain
- brainstem or SC dysfunction (urinary incontinence, CN dysfunction)
- ataxia, clumsy
- down-beating nystagmus, vision issues
- sleep apnea
- speech/swallow issues, diminished gag, vocal cord paralysis
- tinnitus, fluctuating hearing loss, vertigo, nausea
8
Q
Neuralgia (big example)
A
- Neuopathic pain, trigem neuralgia, occipital neuralgia, glossopharyngeal
- Trigem occurs usually in older adults, women>men, tx with anticonvulsants (carbamazepine), can arise from MS
9
Q
Temporal arteritis
A
Inflammatory arteritis of temporal artery
- hedahce, monocular vision loss (Irreversible), jaw claudication, loss of temporal artery pulse, systemic symptoms
- increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)
- dx via temporal artery biopsy
- tx with steroids
10
Q
Cluster headaches
A
1-8 attacks/day
- can last for weeks or months
- attacks separated by remission periods usually lasting months/yrs
- maximal orbitally, supraorbitally, temporally
- restless/agitated
- excrutiating boring pain
- all ages
- more men than women
- men peak in 30’s, women peak in 20’s or 60’s
- no prodrome
- headaches last 15 min to hours
- can wake ppl out of sleep
- worse with smoking and EtOH
- hereditary
- acute tx with high flow O2
- prevent with verapamil
- circadian periodicity
11
Q
Paroxysmal hemicrania
A
Severe, unilateral orbital/supraorbital/temporal pain lasting 2-30 min and occurs several times/day.
- can be txed with indomethacin
- sharp/throbbing pain
- sometimes correlates with circadian rhythm
12
Q
SUNCT
A
3-200 attacks/dauy
- very short duration (Seconds)
- stabbing/burning pain
- no circadian periodicity