Headache, migraine and blackouts Flashcards

1
Q

Headache - acute single episode

A

With meningism (meningitis, encephalitis or subarachnoid haemorrhage), head injury, venous sinus thrombosis, sinusitis or acute glaucoma.

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2
Q

Headache - with meningism

A

If the headache is acute, severe, felt over most of the head and accompanied by meningeal irritation you must exclude:

  • Meningitis – fever, photophobia, stiff neck, purpuric rash or coma.
  • Encephalitis – fever, odd behaviour, seizures or decreased consciousness.
  • Subarachnoid haemorrhage – thunderclap headache, often occipital, stiff neck, focal neurological signs or decreased consciousness.

Admit immediately for an urgent head CT and if negative a lumbar puncture to look for infection or blood in the CSF.

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3
Q

Headache - head injury

A

Headache is common at the site of trauma but may be more generalised. It can last around 2 weeks and is often resistant to analgesia.

Perform a head CT to exclude subdural or extradural haemorrhage if drowsiness, lucid interval or focal neurological signs.

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4
Q

Headache - venous sinus thrombosis

A

A subacute or sudden onset headache with papilloedema.

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5
Q

Headache - sinusitis

A

Causes dull, constant aching pain over the frontal or maxillary sinus with tender overlying skin and postnasal drip - pain should be worse on bending over.

It is commonly accompanied by coryza and the pain usually lasts between 1-2 weeks.

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6
Q

Headache - acute glaucoma

A

Typically in elderly, long sighted patients. A constant, aching pain develops rapidly around one eye and radiated to the forehead.

Symptoms include markedly reduced vision, visual haloes, nausea and vomiting. Signs include a red congested eye, cloudy cornea, dilated and non-responsive pupil and decreased visual acuity.

Attacks may be precipitated by dilating eye drops, emotional upset or by sitting in the dark e.g. in the cinema. Refer urgently – if >1 hour delay in treatment is likely give 500mg IV acetazolamide over several minutes.

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7
Q

Headache - recurrent acute attacks

A

Migraine, cluster headache, trigeminal neuralgia or recurrent (Mollaret’s) menigitis.

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8
Q

Migraine - explanation

A

The old theory behind migraine was vascular – constriction during aura and dilation causing pain.

However MRI during attacks shows episodic cerebral oedema, dilation of intra-cerebral vessels and PET shows increased hypothalamic activity – may explain food cravings?

Triptans work by constricting cranial arteries and inhibiting the release of neurotransmitters involved in pain.

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9
Q

Migraine - symptoms

A

Classically there is a visual or other aura lasting 15-30 minutes followed within 1 hour by a unilateral, throbbing headache.

Alternatively there can be an isolated aura with no headache or an episodic severe headache without aura, often premenstrual and usually unilateral with nausea, vomiting and photophobia or phonophobia. There may also be allodynia – all stimuli produce pain.

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10
Q

Migraine - prodrome and aura

A

A prodrome – yawning, food cravings or changes in sleep, appetite or mood precede the headache by hour or days.

An aura – precedes the headache by minutes and may persist during it – can be visual (chaotic cascading, distorting, jumbling of lines, dots or zigzags, scotomata (a blind spot) or hemianopia) somatosensory (paraesthesia spreading from fingers to face), motor (dysarthria, ataxia, hemiparesis or opthalmoplegia) and speech (dysphasia or paraphasia – senseless word combinations).

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11
Q

Migraine - diagnostic criteria if no aura

A

>5 headaches lasting 4-72 hours with either nausea, vomiting, photo or phonophobia and >2 of – unilateral, pulsating, interferes with life and worsened by routine activity.

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12
Q

Migraine - triggers

A

Chocolate, and ChOCOlATE - cheese, oral contraceptives, caffeine (or its withdrawal), alcohol, anxiety, travel or exercise.

In 50% no trigger is found and in only a few does avoiding the trigger prevent all attacks.

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13
Q

Migraine - management - NSAIDs

A

e.g. 100mg ketoprofen or 900mg dispersible aspirin – less chance of medication misuse headache and similar efficacy to oral 5-HT agonists (e.g. triptans and ergot alkaloids).

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14
Q

Migraine - management - triptans

A

Generally better tolerated than ergots – e.g. rizatriptan has been found to be better and cheaper than sumitriptan.

Triptans are contraindicated in ischaemia heart disease, coronary artery spasm, uncontrolled hypertension and recent lithium, SSRI or ergot use.

Rare side effects include – arrhythmias or angina ± MI even if no pre-existing risk factors.

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15
Q

Migraine - management - ergotamine

A

Take 1mg PO as soon as the headache starts and repeat at 30 minutes – up to 3mg in as day and 6mg in a week. Alternatively can be given as a suppository – 2mg ergotamine and 100mg caffeine up to twice in 24 hours.

Contraindications – OCP, peripheral vascular disease, ischaemic heart disease, pregnancy, breast feeding, hemiplegia migraine, Raynaud’s, liver or renal impairment or hypertension.

Side effects – vascular damage and gangrene.

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16
Q

Migraine - prophylaxis

A

Required if >2 attacks per month. If 1 drug has no effect within 3 months try another:

  • 1st line – 40-120mg propranolol BD, 25-50mg topiramate BD or 25-75mg amitriptyline nocte.
  • 2nd line – valproate, pizotifen (causes weight gain), gabapentin, pregabalin or NSAIDs.
17
Q

Migraine, stroke and the COC pill

A

The incidence of migraine and pill related ischaemic stroke is 8 in 100,000 if aged 20 and 80 in 100,000 if aged 40 years.

Those with migraine with aura are known to be at particular risk and the COC is contraindicated in this group (no problem with progesterone only pill or non-hormonal contraception). In patients with migraine without aura only low dose COCs should be used.

Risk is further increased by smoking, age >35 years, hypertension, BMI >30, diabetes, hyperlipidaemia or family history or arteriopathy when aged <45 years.

18
Q

Headache - cluster headache

A

The male to female ratio is 5:1 and onset is at any age. One theory is that it is caused by superficial temporal artery smooth muscle hyper-reactivity to serotonin.

  • Symptoms – rapid onset severe pain around one eye which may become watery and bloodshot with lid swelling, lacrimation, facial flushing, rhinorrhoea, miosis ± ptosis. Pain is always unilateral and commonly affects the same eye. It lasts between 15-160 minutes, can occur 1-2 times per day, is often nocturnal and clusters last 4-12 weeks.
  • Management – acute – 100% oxygen via a rebreathe mask and 6mg sumitriptan SC at the onset of the attack. Preventatives – 1st line are verapamil or topiramate.
19
Q

Headaches - trigeminal neuralgia

A

A unilateral intense stabbing pain lasting seconds in the trigeminal nerve distribution (commonly mandibular or maxillary). It typically effects Asian women, >50 years old.

  • Triggers - include washing affected area, shaving, eating, talking or dental prostheses.
  • Secondary causes – compression of the trigeminal nerve root by anomalous or aneurysmal intracranial vessels or a tumour, chronic meningeal inflammation, MS, zoster or skull base malformation. MRI is required exclude secondary causes (in 14%).
  • Management – give 100mg carbamazepine PO BD. If drugs fail surgery may be necessary – may be directed at the peripheral nerve or the trigeminal nerve root.
20
Q

Headache - Mollaret’s meningitis

A

Recurrent meningitis – suspect if fever and meningism with every headache.

21
Q

Headache of subacute onset

A

Giant cell arteritis – exclude in all >50 year olds with a headache that has lasted more than a few weeks. Signs include tender, thickened, pulseless temporal arteries, jaw claudication and ESR >40 mm/h. Prompt diagnosis and steroid treatment will prevent blindness.

22
Q

Headache - chronic headaches

A

Tension headache, raised intracranial pressure or medication overuse headache.

23
Q

Headache - tension headache

A

The usual cause of bilateral, non-pulsatile headache ± scalp muscle tenderness but without vomiting or sensitivity to head movement. Stress relief e.g. massage or antidepressants may have more benefit for the patient than a neurologist.

24
Q

Headache - raised ICP

A

Typically worse on waking, when lying down, bending forward or coughing. Other signs include vomiting, papilloedema, seizures, focal neurological signs or personality changes.

Perform imaging to exclude a space occupying lesion and consider idiopathic intracranial hypertension. (Lumbar puncture is contraindicated until after imaging).

25
Q

Headache - medication overuse headache

A

Often caused by mixed analgesics especially those containing paracetamol, codeine, opiates, ergotamine or triptans. This is a common reason for episodic headache becoming chronic daily headaches.

Analgesia must be withdrawn – aspirin or naproxen may help with rebound headaches.

Advise patients not to use over the counter analgesia for more than 6 days per month.

26
Q

Blackout - differential diagnosis

A

Vasovagal syncope, situational syncope, carotid sinus syncope, epilepsy, Stokes-Adams attacks, drop attacks, hypoglycaemia, orthostatic hypotension, anxiety, choking or factitious blackouts.

27
Q

Blackout - vasovagal syncope

A

Due to reflex bradycardia and peripheral vasodilation provoked by pain, emotion, fear or standing up for too long.

Onset is over seconds and is often preceded by pre-syncope - nausea, pallor, sweating and closing in of visual fields. It cannot occur when lying down!

The patient falls to the ground and is unconscious for around 2 minutes. Brief clonic jerking of the limbs may also occur = reflex anoxic convulsions but there is no stiffening of the limbs, incontinence or tongue biting.

28
Q

Blackouts - situational syncope

A

The symptoms are the same as in vasovagal syncope but are related to situations e.g. cough syncope, effort syncope or micturation syncope (mostly effects men during the night).

29
Q

Blackouts - carotid sinus syncope

A

Carotid baroreceptors are hypersensitive and cause excessive reflex bradycardia and peripheral vasodilation on minimal stimulation e.g. head turning or during shaving.

30
Q

Blackouts - epilepsy

A

Attacks vary with type of seizure but certain features are more suggestive of epilepsy – attacks when asleep or lying down, aura, identifiable triggers e.g. television, altered breathing, cyanosis, typical tonic clonic movements, urinary incontinence, tongue biting (ask about a sore tongue), prolonged post-ictal drowsiness, confusion, amnesia and transient focal paralysis (Todd’s palsy).

31
Q

Blackouts - Stokes-Adams attacks

A

Transient arrhythmias e.g. bradycardia due to complete heart block cause decreased cardiac output and loss of consciousness. The patient falls to the ground often with no warning except palpitations - they are pale with a slow or absent pulse.

Recovery is in seconds – the patient flushes, the pulse increases and consciousness is regained. Myoclonic jerks may occur if the attack is prolonged – reflex anoxic convulsion. Attacks may happen in any posture, several times a day.

32
Q

Blackouts - drop attacks

A

Sudden weakness in the legs causes the patient to fall to the ground – usually an older women. There is no warning, no loss of consciousness and no confusion afterwards. The condition is benign and usually resolves spontaneously after a number of attacks.

33
Q

Blackouts - other causes

A
  • Hypoglycaemia – tremor, hunger and perspiration before loss of consciousness in a diabetic.
  • Orthostatic hypotension – LOC on standing from lying – inadequate vasomotor reflexes.
  • Anxiety – hyperventilation, tremor, sweating, tachycardia, paraesthesia, light head but no LOC.
  • Choking – if food blocks the larynx patients may collapse, become cyanosed and can’t speak.
34
Q

Blackouts - examination and investigation

A
  • Examination – cardiovascular, neurological and measure the blood pressure both lying and standing.
  • Investigations – ECG, 24 hour ECG, Us and Es, FBC, glucose, tilt table test, EEG, echo or head CT/MRI.