Headaches Flashcards
What proportion of the population have tension headache at any time ?
40%
What proportion of neurological referrals do headaches account for ?
30%
Identify the most common headache types.
- Tension/muscular
- Migraine
- Analgesia overuse
- Systemic illness
- Cervicogenic
Identify the most serious headache types.
- Subarachnoid Haem
- Meningitis
- Tumours
- Other SOL
- Temporal arteritis
- Strokes (including CV sinus thrombosis)
Identify questions to ask about a headache history.
- How long?
- Position on head?
- Character (not intensity)?
- Frequency? When?
- Diurnal variation?
- Change in character?
- Nausea/vomiting?
- Postural?
- Other neurological symptoms?
- PMH, FH
- Medicines
Identify the timeline, and clinical features of tension headaches.
TIMELINE
• Could have been there for weeks, months, years
• Constant, or worse towards evening
CLINICAL FEATURES
• “tightness”, “pressure” all around the head, or on top of the head
• Rarely with nausea
Identify the main treatments for tension headaches.
• Reassurance
• Explain the muscles
around the head (in a band, when all of them are under tension, feels painful)
• Reduce analgesia (because patients with tension headaches often take a lot of analgesia which may contribute to headache)
• Use relaxation exercises
• Low dose amitriptyline
• Won’t go away overnight
Identify the timeline, and clinical features of migraines.
TIMELINE
• With or without aura, if with then spreads over minutes (most migraine with aura tends to be unilateral)
• Unilateral or bilateral, usually hours-days (common migraine is bilateral without aura)
CLINICAL FEATURES
• Most headache with nausea will be migraine
• Photophobia, phonophobia, gut symptoms
• Pulsating, sharp
• Maybe exacerbated by physical activity
• Often family history
• Triggers (e.g. foods, alcohol, beginning or end of working week, periods)
Are there any epidemiological groups which are especially susceptible to migraines ?
• More common in women, especially mid-
cycle, at period and menopause (oestrogen)
What is the mechanism of migraines ?
Mechanisms unclear, vascular and neural theories, spreading depression of Leao (2- 5mm/min) (in animals, can stimulate cortex and see change of electrical activity over surface of cortex, which is thought to correlate with development of aura)
Why might you ask a patient to keep a diary ?
In migraine, to help decide pattern and treatments
Identify the type of aura which may arise in migraines.
Commonest: visual aura (flashing light and blind spot which gradually enlarges, usually jagged, and usually black and white)
Can be more complex and involve weakness, spreading numbness, dysphasia (in such cases, difficult to distinguish from stroke)
Describe migraine treatments.
ACUTE (if occasional)
• Triptans – agonists at 5HT- 1b and 5HT-1d receptors (rizatriptan, and other triptans)
• Aspirin, paracetamol
• Anti-nausea (prochlorperazine, metoclopramide), to stop N/V
PROPHYLACTIC (if using too many triptans, switch to prophylactic) (if >2/month)
• Beta blockers (e.g. propranolol)
• Low dose amitriptyline
• Pizotifen (5HT-2a and 2c antagonist, antihistamine, anticholinergic), can induce weight gain
- Topiramate (anti-epileptic)
- Sodium valproate (anti-epileptic)
- Candesartan (ARB inhibitor)
- Flunarazine (Calcium channel blocker)
- Lisinopril (ACEi)
- Methysergide (can cause retroperitoneal fibrosis, don’t use for more than three months at a time)
Sometimes, prophylactic works well for few weeks then stops working because get used to it. At that point, stop propranolol and get into low dose amitriptyline, then when bring back propranolol it will work again. Can cycle treatments.
OTHER
• Botulinum toxin injection into muscles of back of neck (usually every 90 days)
• 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
• Acupuncture
Identify any drugs that women with migraine and aura should NOT use.
Women with migraine and aura should not use combined OCP, because much increased risk of stroke (esp estrogen containing pill, progesterone only pill probably safer)
Identify the main clinical features of triG neuralgia.
• Shooting pain in one or more divisions of V
• Extremely painful, maybe triggered by cold or
eating
What is a cause of triG neuralgia ?
• In younger people consider demyelination (and MS), older people (more common), often abberant blood vessel touching V
Describe treatment for triG neuralgia.
Rx Carbamazepine (anti-epileptic), gabapentin (anti-epileptic), injection (into triG ganglion), surgery (if due to aberrant blood vessels touching CNV, can put bit of sponge between them)
What are the main clinical features of TriG autonomic Cephalgia ? What are its main types ?
- (rare) Recurrent pain in trigeminal distribution with autonomic features (eye watering, nasal congestion, redness eye)
- Commonest of these headaches is cluster headache: unilateral (striking circadian rhythm, same time of day, clustering in periods usually few weeks)
- Other type is Paroxysmal hemicranias (women>men), shorter, more frequent attacks, responds well to indomethacin, affects one half of the face