Headache Flashcards

1
Q

What are some red flag features of a headache?

A
New onset headache > 55 y/o
Known/previous malignancy
Immune-suppressed
Early morning headache
Exacerbation by valsalva e.g. coughing, sneezing
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2
Q

What percentage of migraines have aura?

A

Migraines with aura = 20%

Migraines without aura = 80%

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3
Q

Criteria for migraine without aura:
At least 3 attacks
Duration 1-4 hours
2 of; moderate/severe, unilateral, throbbing pain, worse on movement
1 of; autonomic features, photophobia/photophobia
True or false?

A

False - partly

Criteria for migraine without aura:
At least 5 attacks
Duration 4-72 hours
2 of; moderate/severe, unilateral, throbbing pain, worse on movement
1 of; autonomic features, photophobia/photophobia

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4
Q

What is the pathophysiology behind migraines?

A

Both vascular and neural influences cause migraines in susceptible individuals
Stress triggers changes in the brain, these changes cause serotonin to be released. This causes the blood vessels in the brain to constrict and dilate.
Chemicals including substance P are released and then irritate nerves and blood vessels causing pain

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5
Q

What is the typical duration of aura in migraine with aura?

A

Usually 20-60 minutes. Headache follows <1 hour later but aura can occur simultaneously. Visual aura is the most common but sensory, motor or language aura can occur

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6
Q

NSAIDs are used in headache. Which NSAIDs are used and how effective are they?

A

Aspirin (900mg), naproxen (250mg) and ibuprofen (400mg) +/- antiemetic
60% significant reduction in headache at 2 hours - only 25% complete pain relief
If gastroparesis consider anti-emetic

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7
Q

Name a serotonin agonist class of drugs that are used in headaches

A

Triptans
Oral, sublingual, SC - consider method in those with N+V
Treat at start of headache
Rizatriptan or frovatriptan for sustained relief

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8
Q

When would you consider prophylactic treatment in a migraine patient?

A

More than 3 attacks per month or very severe attacks
Consider non-pharmacological methods such as acupuncture, relaxation exercises
Aim is to titrate drug as tolerated to achieve efficacy at the lowest possible dose

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9
Q

How effective is propranolol in migraine prophylaxis and when should it be avoided?

A

Reduction in migraine frequency in around 60-80% of patients. Avoid in asthma, peripheral vascular disease and HF

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10
Q

What carbonic anhydrase inhibitor is used as migraine prophylaxis and has a poor side effect profile so must be started slowly?

A

Topiramate

Adverse effects - weight loss, paraesthesia, impaired concentration, enzyme inducer

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11
Q

Name some migraine prophylactic drugs (other than propranolol and topiramate)

A

Amitriptyline, gabapentin, botulinum toxin, sodium valproate, pizotifen

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12
Q

What are the features of a tension type headache?

A

Pressing tingling quality, bilateral, mild-moderate, absence of N+V, absence of photophobia or phonophobia

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13
Q

How is a tension type headache treated?

A

Relaxation physio therapy, antidepressant e.g. dothiepin or amitriptyline for 3 months
Reassure

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14
Q

What are the trigeminal autonomic cephalgias (TACs)?

A

A group of primary headache disorders characterised by unilateral trigeminal distribution pain that occurs in association with prominent ipsilateral cranial autonomic features

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15
Q

What are ipsilateral cranial autonomic features?

A

Ptosis, miosis, nasal stuffiness, nausea/vomiting, tearing, eye lid oedema

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16
Q

What are the 4 main types of trigeminal autonomic cephalgics?

A

Cluster, paroxysmal hemicrania, hemicrania continua, SUNCT

17
Q

Who typically gets cluster headaches?

A

Young (30-40y/o) men>women

Usually occurs around sleep and has a seasonal variation

18
Q

What are the features of cluster headache?

A

Severe unilateral headache lasting 45-90 minutes
1-8 times per day
Cluster bout may last from a few weeks to months

19
Q

How do you treat cluster headaches?

A

High flow oxygen 100% for 20 mins
SC sumatriptan 6mg
Steroids - reducing courser over 2 weeks
Verapamil for prophylaxis

20
Q

Who tends to get paroxysmal hemicrania?

A

Older (50-60y/o) women>men

21
Q

What are the features of paroxysmal hemicrania?

A

Severe unilateral headache, unilateral autonomic features
Duration 10-30mins
Frequency 1-40 per day
I.e. shorter duration and more frequent than cluster

22
Q

What is the treatment for paroxysmal hemicrania?

A

Absolute response to indomethicin

23
Q

What does SUNCT stand for?

A
S = short lived (15-120 seconds)
U = unilateral
N = neuralgiaform headache
C = conjunctival injections 
T = tearing
24
Q

What is the treatment for SUNCT?

A

Lamotrigine, gabapentin

25
Q

What investigations are used with new onset unilateral cranial autonomic features?

A

MRI brain and MR angiogram

26
Q

Name some features of idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH)

A

Females > males
Obesity is a huge risk factor
Headaches - diurnal variation with morning N+V
Visual loss

27
Q

What investigations are done for IIH and what would the typical results be?

A

MRI brain - normal
CSF - elevated pressure and normal constituents
Visual fields

28
Q

How is IIH treated?

A

Weight loss
Acetazolamide
Ventricular atrial/lunar peritoneal shunt
Monitor visual fields and CSF pressure

29
Q

Who tends to get trigeminal neuralgia and how is it triggered?

A

Older women > men

Triggered by touch, usually V2/3

30
Q

What are the features of trigeminal neuralgia?

A

Severe stabbing unilateral pain
Duration 1-90 seconds
Frequency 10-100 per day
Bouts pain may last from a few weeks to months before remission

31
Q

How is trigeminal neuralgia treated?

A

Medical treatment - carbamazepine, gabapentin, phenytoin, baclofen
Surgical - ablation, decompression
Investigations - MRI brain