Extracranial causes of headache
From WikiCNS
- Tension type headaches
- pain is typically bilateral, band type or squeezing; improves with exercise
- NOTE: tension headache does NOT get worse with jumping up and down while migraine headaches DO
- Migraine type headache
- pain is mostly unilateral with throbbing, pulsing or stabbing quality; often accompanied by nausea and vomiting
- aura of migraine is NOT due to vasospasm as once thought; there is decreased CBF seen in some migraine patients but this may be due to decreased activity of the brain and not symbolic of the migraine
- cause of pain IS due to dilated, swollen, throbbing vessels in the head
- may be related to dysfunction of Ca channels
- common migraine – no aura or neurologic deficit, headache lasting 4-72 hours, and at least two of the following: photophobia, unilateral location, pulsatile nature
- treatment: ergotamine to abort the headache while verapamil or amitryptiline may be used as prophylaxis
- classic migraine – with aura and/or neurologic deficit
- complicated migraine – classic migraine with neurologic deficit lasting < 30 days
- ophthalmoplegic migraine – occurs mostly in children; headache always occurs on the same side as the ophthalmoplegia, presents with visual auras, and may last for several days; occurs equally in boys and girls
- cluster headaches
- pain is always unilateral behind or next to one eye and is always the same eye (often gets better with exercise)
- onset is sudden and memorable by the patient
- typically occurs in young adult men
- treatment is a dose of ergotomine prior to bed or lithium long term; inhalation of oxygen at the onset of an attack may be helpful as well, acute attack may also be treated with prednisone
- paroxysmal hemicrania (a related disorder) may be treated with indomethacin
- thunderclap headache
- possible causes:
- aneurysmal rupture, aneurysmal stretching, carotid dissection, cerebral venous thrombosis, pheochromocytoma, acute hydrocephalus, perimesencephalic hemorrhage
- Remember: Pascal V. Amore’s PhDs (Perimesencephalic, Venous thrombosis, Aneurysm rupture, Pheochromocytoma, Hydrocephalus, carotid Dissection, Stretching of aneurysm)
- possible causes:
- Basilar migraine of Bickerstaff
- migraine plus feinting, nausea, quadriplegia, vomiting, ataxia, dysarthria