Headache

Author(s):  
Christopher H. Hawkes ◽  
Kapil D. Sethi ◽  
Thomas R. Swift

This chapter enumerates features that are reassuring and do not point to serious disease, such as carotid artery tenderness, slow evolution of symptoms as in hemisensory or hemiparetic migraine, sensory or motor symptoms on the same side as the headache, and age of symptom onset. Several Red Flags are given that indicate the need for investigation, such as first or worst headache, cough headache, morning headache, coital headache, thunderclap headache, continuous headache in an elderly person, medication overuse headache, and CADASIL syndrome. Clues for cluster headache, orthostatic headache, idiopathic intracranial hypertension, and several other headache syndromes are mentioned. Also listed are a few specific headaches that respond to indomethacin.

Author(s):  
Christopher H. Hawkes ◽  
Kapil D. Sethi ◽  
Thomas R. Swift

This chapter enumerates various features that are reassuring and do not point to serious disease. Several Red Flags are given that indicate the need for investigation. Clues for cluster headache, orthostatic headache, and several other headache syndromes are mentioned. Also listed are a few specific headaches that respond to indomethacin.


2008 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 122-127 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koen Paemeleire ◽  
Stefan Evers ◽  
Peter J. Goadsby

Cephalalgia ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 626-630 ◽  
Author(s):  
P Irimia ◽  
E Cittadini ◽  
K Paemeleire ◽  
AS Cohen ◽  
PJ Goadsby

Our objective was to compare the presence of self-reported unilateral photophobia or phonophobia, or both, during headache attacks comparing patients with trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias (TACs)—including cluster headache, shortlasting unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing (SUNCT) and paroxysmal hemicrania—or hemicrania continua, and other headache types. We conducted a prospective study in patients attending a referral out-patient clinic over 5 months and those admitted for an intramuscular indomethacin test. Two hundred and six patients were included. In episodic migraine patients, two of 54 (4%) reported unilateral photophobia or phonophobia, or both. In chronic migraine patients, six of 48 (13%) complained of unilateral photophobia or phonophobia, or both, whereas none of the 24 patients with medication-overuse headache reported these unilateral symptoms, although these patients all had clinical symptoms suggesting the diagnosis of migraine. Only three of 22 patients (14%) suffering from new daily persistent headache (NDPH) experienced unilateral photophobia or phonophobia. In chronic cluster headache 10 of 21 patients (48%) had unilateral photophobia or phonophobia, or both, and this symptom appeared in four of five patients (80%) with episodic cluster headache. Unilateral photophobia or phonophobia, or both, were reported by six of 11 patients (55%) with hemicrania continua, five of nine (56%) with SUNCT, and four of six (67%) with chronic paroxysmal hemicrania. Unilateral phonophobia or photophobia, or both, are more frequent in TACs and hemicrania continua than in migraine and NDPH. The presence of these unilateral symptoms may be clinically useful in the differential diagnosis of primary headaches.


2006 ◽  
Vol 253 (5) ◽  
pp. 661-663 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. S. M. Razvi ◽  
L. Walker ◽  
E. Teasdale ◽  
A. Tyagi ◽  
K. W. Muir

Neurology ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 67 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Paemeleire ◽  
A. Bahra ◽  
S. Evers ◽  
M. S. Matharu ◽  
P. J. Goadsby

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 238-243 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Jin Jung ◽  
Han-Joon Kim ◽  
Dallah Yoo ◽  
Ji-Hyun Choi ◽  
Jin Hee Im ◽  
...  

Background: Multiple system atrophy (MSA) patients pre­sent a variety of symptoms other than autonomic dysfunctions, parkinsonism, and cerebellar ataxia. The aim of this study was to evaluate the frequency of various motor and non-motor symptoms including so-called “red flags” in patients with early MSA and to determine whether the frequency of these symptoms was different between the parkinsonian (MSA-P) and cerebellar (MSA-C) subtypes. Methods: Sixty-one probable or possible MSA patients with disease duration of 3 years or less were included. Patients were classified into MSA-P, MSA-C, and MSA-PC. The frequency of 13 features including various motor and non-motor symptoms that commonly occur in MSA was assessed. Results: Dysarthria was the most prevalent feature (98.4%) followed by sexual dysfunction (95.1%). Probable REM sleep behavior disorder was present in 90.2%. The frequency of constipation (82.0%), dysphagia (68.9%), and snoring (70.5%) was also high. Stridor was present in 42.6% and more common in MSA-C than in MSA-P. Conclusions: Increasing awareness of various motor and non-motor symptoms may assist clinicians to make an early, accurate diagnosis and to improve management of patients with MSA. We suggest that the diagnostic accuracy can be improved if these features are appropriately reflected in the new diagnostic criteria for MSA.


2001 ◽  
Vol 21 (10) ◽  
pp. 1171-1176 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arne May ◽  
Christian Büchel ◽  
Robert Turner ◽  
Peter J. Goadsby

For much of the twentieth century migraine and cluster headache have been considered as vascular headaches whose pathophysiology was determined by changes in cranial vascular diameter. To examine nociceptive neural influences on the cranial circulation, the authors studied healthy volunteers' responses to injection of the pain-producing compound capsaicin in terms of the caliber of the internal carotid artery. The study was conducted using magnetic resonance angiographic techniques. Injection of capsaicin into the skin innervated by the ophthalmic (first) division of the trigeminal nerve elicited 40% ± 27% (mean ± SD) increase in vascular cross-sectional area in the right (ipsilateral) internal carotid artery when compared with the mean baseline ( P < 0.001). Injection of capsaicin into the skin of the chin to stimulate the mandibular (third) division of the trigeminal nerve and into the leg led to a similar pain perception and failed to produce any significant change in vessel caliber. The data suggest that there is a highly functionally organized, somatotopically congruent trigeminal innervation of the cranial vessels, with a potent vasodilator effect of the ophthalmic division on the large intracranial vessels. The data are consistent with the notion that pain drives changes in vessel caliber in migraine and cluster headache, not vice versa. These conditions therefore should be regarded as primary neurovascular headaches not as vascular headaches.


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