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Headache

Headache. HEADACHES. PRIMARY CARE MANAGEMENT. Headaches-overview. Primary headaches - Migraine -tension type -cluster headache/cephalgias -Others. Headache classification. Secondary headaches- Trauma Cranial/ cervical vascular disorder Substance or its withdrawl Infection

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Headache

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  1. Headache

  2. HEADACHES PRIMARY CARE MANAGEMENT

  3. Headaches-overview • Primary headaches • -Migraine • -tension type • -cluster headache/cephalgias • -Others

  4. Headache classification • Secondary headaches- • Trauma • Cranial/ cervical vascular disorder • Substance or its withdrawl • Infection • Homeostasis related • Neck , sinuses,eyes,nose, teeth • Anxiety/somatisation

  5. Headache classification • Neuralgias/other headaches • Eg cranial neralgias, trigeminal neuralgia, atypical facial pain

  6. Headaches • Affect 40% of UK population • Migraine- 15% of population. • Females:males 3:1 • Tension headaches- 80% of population • Cluster headache 1 in 200

  7. MIGRAINE

  8. Migraine

  9. Migraine management • Look at predisposing factors • -stress, fatigue,depression,anxiety,menstruation, menopause, head/neck trauma. • -trigger factors-dietary (20%), relaxation, travel, missing meals/sleep, bright lights, noise, strenuous exercise, mensruation.

  10. Migraine • Duration (hours3 days) • Without aura in 2/3rd -unilateral, pulsating, moderate/severe intensity, aggravated by exercise, nausea/vomiting. Photophonophobia • With aura in 1/3rd- spreading scintillating scotoma, unilateral paraesthesia, dysphasia

  11. Migraine-drug intervention • Step one- simple analgesic+/- antiemetic Eg aspirin 600-900mg +buccastem 3-6mgbd Step two – rectal analgesic +/- antiemetic Eg diclofenac suppositaries+domperidone suppositaries Step three – triptans-use at onset of pain, not aura. Some rebound of symptoms in 20-50% of patients within 48 hours.

  12. Triptans • Sumatriptan 50-100mg • Zolmitriptan 2.5mg then rpt after 2 hours (not children) • Rizatriptan 10mg (equiv sumatriptan 100mg) • Almotritan 12.5mg-HIGH EFFICACY. COST EFFECTIVE

  13. Migraine prophylaxis • Ineffective for medication overuse headaches • Use for 4-6 months-taper off over 2-3 weeks. • Agents: betablockers, TCAD, pizotifen, gabapentin, lisinopril • Other agents-topiramate, sodium valproate, clonidine • Non drug therapies

  14. Tension headache

  15. Tension headaches • Chronic tension type headache:- -more than 15 days per month - often daily -often stress/lifestyle related

  16. Tension headaches • Episodic tension-type headache- -may be unilateral but tend to be generalised - pressure/tightness - often spreads from neck -stress related or related to cervical/cranial musculoskeletal anomalies

  17. Tension headache management • Lifestyle changes • Regular exercise • Drug treatments-acute-aspirin 600-900mg, ibuprofen 600mg, naproxen 250-500mg, paracetamol 500mg-1g • Prophylaxis-amitriptyline, nortriptyline, propranolol, SSRIs

  18. Medication overuse headaches • Affects 1 in 50 adults • Females:males 5:1 • First noted with phenacetin/ergotamine • More common with aspirin/ NSAIDs/paracetamol/codeine/DF118 • Can take several weeks to resolve after medication withdrawl • Key feature-pre-emptive use of analgesia

  19. Medication overuse headaches-cont. • Low doses daily carry larger risk than higher doses weekly • Esp common if using simple analgesia more days than not per month • Using triptans, codeine >10days per month • Worse on awakening in the morning • Worse after physical exertion

  20. Medication withdrawl headache-treatment • Stage one-abrupt withdrawl most effective-Sx will worsen in days 3-7. • Stage 2-recovery from MOH • Stage 3- review and assess the underlying primary headache disorder • Stage 4- prevent relapse • Failure to withdraw- naproxen 250mgtds/500mg bd, tcad.

  21. References • Mentor/GP notebook • BASH (British Association for the Study of Headaches)-guidelines. www.bash.org.uk • Neurological Differential diagnoses. Batten, J. 2nd edition.

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