cluster headache
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2022 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Heiko Pohl ◽  
Andreas R. Gantenbein ◽  
Peter S. Sandor ◽  
Jean Schoenen ◽  
Colette Andrée

AbstractPatients with primary headache disorders such as cluster headache cycle between being entirely healthy and almost completely incapacitated. Sick leave or reduced performance due to headache attacks demands flexibility by their social counterparts. The objective of this study is to test the hypothesis that headache patients cause frustration that grows with the times colleagues have to take over their work. In this study, we analysed cluster headache patients’ answers to an online questionnaire. Participants self-reported their number of sick days, the number of days on which leisure activities were missed and whether they felt understood by colleagues and family. We then investigated the correlation between the number of sick days and the proportion of patients feeling understood by colleagues and friends. We found that feeling understood by colleagues and friends decreases with a growing number of sick days. However, when sick days accrue further, this proportion increases again. The number of sick days correlates similarly with both colleagues’ and friends’ understanding. The number of cluster headache patients feeling understood by others decreases with an increasing number of sick days. Their social circles’ frustration with the patients’ failure to meet obligations and expectations are a likely reason. With a growing number of sick days, however, the portion of patients feeling understood rises again despite patients meeting others’ expectations even less. This ‘comprehension paradox’ implies the influence of other factors. We suspect that growing numbers of sick days foster understanding as the disability of the disease becomes increasingly apparent.


2022 ◽  
pp. 101316
Author(s):  
Sakshi Prasad ◽  
Abdulrahim Mehadi ◽  
Nirja Kaka ◽  
Sharan Jhaveri ◽  
Chaithanya Avanthika ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
pp. 93-104
Author(s):  
R.B. Brandt ◽  
J. Haan ◽  
G.M. Terwindt ◽  
R. Fronczek
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Author(s):  
Mr. Bite Rushikesh Vishwanath

Abstract: Headache is an extremely common symptom and collectively headache disorders are among the most common of the nervous system disorders, with a prevalence of 48.9% in the general population.1 Headache affects people of all ages, races and socioeconomic status and is more common in women. Some headaches are extremely debilitating and have significant impact on an individual’s quality of life, imposing huge costs to healthcare and indirectly to the economy in general. Only a small proportion of headache disorders require specialist input. The vast majority can be effectively treated by a primary care physician or generalist with correct clinical diagnosis that requires no special investigation. Primary headache disorders – Headaches, tension headache and cluster headache – constitute nearly 98% of all headaches; however, secondary headaches are important to recognise as they are serious and may be life threatening. This article provides an overview of the most common headache disorders and discusses the red flag symptoms that help identify serious causes that merit urgent specialist referral. The current pathway of headache care in the UK is discussed with a view to proposing a model that might fit well in the financially constrained National Health Service (NHS) and with new NHS reforms. The role of the national society, the British Association for the Study of Headache, and the patient organisations such as Headaches Trust in headache education to the professionals and the general public in shaping headache care in the UK is described. The article concludes by summarising evidence-based management of common headache diagnoses. Keywords: Headache, Headaches, tension headache, cluster headache, medication overuse headache


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefania Ferraro ◽  
Jean Paul Medina ◽  
Anna Nigri ◽  
Luca Giani ◽  
Greta Demichelis ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND: Converging evidence suggests that anatomical and functional mesocorticolimbic abnormalities support the chronicization of pain disorders. METHODS: We mapped structural and functional alterations of the mesocorticolimbic system in a sample of chronic cluster headache (cCH) patients (n = 28) in comparison to age and sex-matched healthy individuals (n=28) employing structural MRI and resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI). RESULTS: Univariate logistic regression models showed that several of the examined structures/areas (i.e., the bilateral nucleus accumbens, ventral diencephalon, hippocampus, and frontal pole, and the right amygdala) differentiated cCH patients from healthy individuals (p<0.05, uncorrected). Specifically, all the significant structures/areas had increased volumes in cCH patients compared to healthy individuals. The examination of the groups suffering from left and right-sided cranial attacks showed a lateralization effect: ipsilateral to the pain ventral diencephalic regions and contralateral to the pain nucleus accumbens discriminated cCH patients from healthy individuals. The rs-fMRI data analyses showed that cCH patients compared to CTRL individuals present robust reduced functional connectivity in the right frontal pole-right amygdala pathway (p<0.05, FDR-corrected). CONCLUSION: Our results showed that cCH patients present anatomical and functional maladaptation of the mesocorticolimbic system, with functional data indicating a possible prefrontal areas' failure to modulate the mesolimbic structures. These results were opposite to what we hypothesized based on the previous literature on chronic pain conditions. Future studies should assess whether the observed mesocorticolimbic abnormalities are due to the neuroprotective effects of the assumed medications, or to the frequent comorbidity of CH with neuropsychiatric disorders or if they are a genuine neural signature of CH and/or cCH condition.


Drugs ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans Christoph Diener ◽  
Arne May

Cephalalgia ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 033310242110582
Author(s):  
Greta Demichelis ◽  
Chiara Pinardi ◽  
Luca Giani ◽  
Jean Paul Medina ◽  
Ruben Gianeri ◽  
...  

Purpose Previous studies on brain morphological alterations in chronic cluster headache revealed inconsistent findings. Method The present cross-sectional explorative study determined telencephalic and cerebellar cortex thickness alterations in a relatively wide sample of chronic cluster headache patients (n = 28) comparing them to matched healthy individuals. Results The combination of two highly robust state-of-the-art approaches for thickness estimation (Freesurfer, CERES), strengthened by functional characterization of the identified abnormal regions, revealed four main results: chronic cluster headache patients show 1) cortical thinning in the right middle cingulate cortex, left posterior insula, and anterior cerebellar lobe, regions involved in nociception's sensory and sensory-motor aspects and possibly in autonomic functions; 2) cortical thinning in the left anterior superior temporal sulcus and the left collateral/lingual sulcus, suggesting neuroplastic maladaptation in areas possibly involved in social cognition, which may promote psychiatric comorbidity; 3) abnormal functional connectivity among some of these identified telencephalic areas; 4) the identified telencephalic areas of cortical thinning present robust interaction, as indicated by the functional connectivity results, with the left posterior insula possibly playing a pivotal role. Conclusion The reported results constitute a coherent and robust picture of the chronic cluster headache brain. Our study paves the way for hypothesis-driven studies that might impact our understanding of the pathophysiology of this condition.


Author(s):  
Sara Pérez-Pereda ◽  
Jorge Madera ◽  
Vicente González-Quintanilla ◽  
Marta Drake-Pérez ◽  
Clara Naima Marzal Espí ◽  
...  
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