Approach - headache Flashcards

1
Q

(8) Things to ask in a neurological Hx

A
–Weakness
–Numbness
–Dizziness
–Clumsiness
–Pain
–Speech problems
–Disturbance of hearing or vision
–Altered mentation or consciousness
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2
Q

How can you classify neurological patterns (5)?

A
  • Peripheral nerve (e.g. femoral, median)
  • Spinal nerve
  • Peripheral neuropathy
  • Hemisyndrome
  • Spinal cord (e.g. paraplegia)
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3
Q

How do you classify timeline of a headache?

A
•Onset
–Acute: Instantaneous (ictal), Seconds, Minutes, Hours
–Sub-acute
–Chronic
•Sequence of symptoms
•Constant vs. episodic
•Progressive vs. stable
•Gradual vs. step-wise
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4
Q

What (3) interacting illnesses & risk factors should you ask in a headache?

A

–Diabetes
–Rheumatological conditions
–Vascular risk

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5
Q

5 types of important headaches

A
  • Migraine: Headache+Aura
  • Tension-type headache
  • Chronic daily headache
  • Sub-arachnoid haemorrhage
  • Raised intracranial pressure
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6
Q

Describe migraine

  • epidemiology
  • risk factors
  • Px
  • associated features
A

•Common: 20% women, 5-10% of men
•Idiopathic headache syndrome: Genetic
•May be preceded by aura but
Over 2/3 have migraine without aura

Px:
• a few hours to 3 days
•Recurrent, episodic headache
•Really bad pain
–Moderate to severe
–Building over minutes
•UNILATERAL
•Pulsating
•Aggravated by exercise
Associated with:
–Nausea and vomiting
–Photo- or phonophobia
- paraesthesia, weakness, dysphasia, basilar migraine 
- visual phenomena
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7
Q

Describe tension-type headache

  • Px
  • associated features
A

•Mild to moderate
•Band-like
–BILATERAL
–Pressing

•NOT associated with
–Exercise induction
–Nausea
–Photo/phonophobia

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8
Q

Describe chronic daily headache

  • Px
  • associated features
A

•Most days, most of the day

•Chronic migraine
–Evolves from migraine without aura
–Just as miserable as it sounds

•Chronic tension-type headache
–Individually mild headaches
–Persistence distressing

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9
Q

Describe subarachnoid haemorrhage

  • timeline
  • Px
  • associated features
  • Ix
A

•Thunderclap headache: SUDDEN ONSET IS THE KEY

•May have neurological symptoms/signs
–Weakness/sensory loss
–Impairment of consciousness often occurs. Depth of coma marks prognosis

Headache is meningeal
•Moderate to severe
•Photo/phonophobia
•Nausea
•May be unilateral

Ix: plain CT. If negative, do lumbar puncture

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10
Q

Other (3) thunderclap headaches than SAH

A
  • Sexual and exertional headaches
  • Vasospastic headache
  • Primary thunderclap headache
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11
Q

Describe raised ICP headache

  • Px
  • associated features
A
  • Diffuse headache
  • Variable severity: Often progressive
  • Nausea prominent

•Worse with increases in ICP
–Valsalva (cough, straining)
–Morning headache
–Better standing

•Papiloedema
–Peripheral visual loss
–Transient blindness

•Diplopia
–Sixth nerve palsy

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12
Q

26yo woman with transient, objective left sided weakness and sensory disturbance.

Acute presentation to ED.
Sensory and motor symptoms fully resolved.

DDx?

A
  • Migraine aura: High prior probability
  • Transient ischaemic attack
  • Focal seizure
  • Hypoglycaemia
  • Vasospastic headache
  • Functional neurological disorder
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13
Q

Compare Px of migraine, TIA & focal seizures

A

All have cortical involvement, acute onset

Migraine:

  • gradual offset & often stepwise
  • nausea, headache
  • photo/phonophobia
  • more likely in young

TIA:

  • gradual offset
  • CV history. MI/Stroke/PVD
  • common in >65yo

Focal seizure:

  • distinct offset; Todd’s paresis
  • clonus/dystonia prior to weakness
  • dyscognitive phase
  • previous, stereotyped events
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14
Q

Does EEG diagnose seizure?

A

NO.

But it predicts recurrence sometimes

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