HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of...

37
HEADACHE HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University

Transcript of HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of...

Page 1: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

HEADACHEHEADACHE

Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management

James J. Foody, MD, FACP

Feinberg School of Medicine

Northwestern University

Page 2: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Headache Workshop GoalsHeadache Workshop Goals

• Recognition of Several Headache Syndromes

• Management Strategies

Page 3: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Headache ClassificationHeadache Classification

• Primary v Secondary

• Paroxysmal v Chronic

• Episodic v Recurrent

• Mild to moderate v Moderate to severe

Page 4: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

What is This?What is This?

Page 5: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.
Page 6: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Case #1Case #1CHARACTER THROBBING

QUALITY UNILATERAL

SEVERITY DISABLING

ONSET MAXIMAL IN 1 HOUR

DURATION HOURS

RELIEF NSAID INADEQUATE

FREQUENCY 2-4 PER WEEK

CATAMENEAL

Page 7: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

DIAGNOSIS #1DIAGNOSIS #1

MIGRAINEMIGRAINE

Page 8: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Migraine MorphologyMigraine Morphology

Diagnostic criteria for migraine without aura From:   Goadsby: BMJ, Volume 312(7041).May 18, 1996.1279-1283

Page 9: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Migraine AuraMigraine Aura

• Spreading electrochemical depression across cortex

• Typically occurs 20-30 minutes before onset of head pain

• >80% migraineurs never experience aura

• Aura can occur w/o headache

Page 10: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Migraine AssociationsMigraine Associations

• Colic in infancy• Motion sickness• Ice pick-like head pains• “Freezer brain”• Increased psycho-sensory sensitivity before

migraine– Increased appetite (especially for chocolate)– Sleeplessness– Burst of activity

Page 11: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Migraine TriggersMigraine Triggers

• Sleep deprivation/excess

• Caffeine ingestion or caffeine withdrawal

• Wine, especially red, & alcohol in general

• Fasting

• Sex hormones

• Most migraines have no trigger

• Strong familial pattern

Page 12: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Case #2Case #2CHARACTER DULL

QUALITY BIFRONTAL

SEVERITY MODERATE

ONSET UPON AWAKENING

DURATION ALL DAY

RELIEF FIORINAL INADEQUATE

FREQUENCY DAILY

Page 13: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

DIAGNOSIS #2DIAGNOSIS #2

CHRONIC DAILY CHRONIC DAILY HEADACHEHEADACHE

TRANSFORMED TRANSFORMED MIGRAINEMIGRAINE

Page 14: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Chronic Daily HeadacheChronic Daily Headache

• Rebound effect from analgesic

• Rebound headaches begin to overlap

• More analgesics due to more headaches

• Worst offenders:– Caffeine– Barbiturate combinations e.g Fiorinal– Narcotics

Page 15: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Chronic Daily HeadacheChronic Daily HeadacheAlternative HypothesisAlternative Hypothesis

• Supraspinal pain regulatory pathways are dysfunctional

• Overuse of analgesics is associated, not causative

• At least 2/3 had prior typical migraine

Page 16: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Case #3Case #3CHARACTER BORING

QUALITY UNILATERAL

SEVERITY DISABLING

ONSET AWAKENS FROM SLEEP

DURATION 10-20 MINUTES

RELIEF SPONTANEOUS

FREQUENCY 2-4 PER NIGHT FOR 10 NIGHTS

Page 17: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

DIAGNOSIS #3DIAGNOSIS #3

CLUSTER CLUSTER HEADACHEHEADACHE

Page 18: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Cluster HeadacheCluster Headache

• Clustering refers to calendar

• 80-90% affect males

• Never throbbing

• Always unilateral

• Often awaken 2-3 hours after falling asleep

• Alcohol invariable trigger during cluster

Page 19: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Case #4Case #4CHARACTER SHARP

QUALITY WORST PAIN OF LIFE

SEVERITY DISABLING

ONSET INTERCOURSE

DURATION 20 MINUTES

RELIEF SPONTANEOUS

FREQUENCY ONCE

Page 20: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

DIAGNOSIS #4DIAGNOSIS #4

THUNDERCLAP THUNDERCLAP HEADACHEHEADACHE

Page 21: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Thunderclap HeadacheThunderclap Headache

• No known cause

• Benign

• Triggers– Exertion– Sexual activity– Weight lifting– Prolonged Valsalva

Page 22: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Case #5Case #5CHARACTER DULL

QUALITY BIFRONTAL

SEVERITY SOME DISABLING

ONSET 6 MONTHS

DURATION CONSTANT

RELIEF NSAID / NARCOTIC

FREQUENCY DAILY

Page 23: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

DIAGNOSIS #5DIAGNOSIS #5

CHRONIC DAILY CHRONIC DAILY HEADACHEHEADACHE

TRANSFORMED TRANSFORMED MIGRAINEMIGRAINE

Page 24: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

““Sinus” HeadacheSinus” Headache

• Pain from sinusitis is usually easily distinguishable

• Sinusitis can trigger migraine headache

• Migraineurs often give a family history of sinus headaches that are actually misnamed migraine

Page 25: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

 

Case #1

 

Bethany is a 26 year old woman c/o headache.

She has a headache every Saturday morning for the past 4 years. She reports more frequent headaches beginning 1 week before menses and lasting until the 2nd or 3rd day of menses. The headache gradually builds until it is at its maximum in an hour. It throbs, usually on the left side, although occasionally on the right or across the front of the head. She feels nauseated and vomits rarely.

Social history: single, lives in Lincoln Park, condoms and diaphragm for contraception, works as attorney in large firm 6 days a week; no smoking; drinks alcohol only on Saturday night; sleeps from midnight-5:30 except sleeps until noon Sunday; drinks a Starbucks Venti latte every morning on the way to work and 2-3 cups coffee during the morning. Usually skips breakfast, eats light lunch.

ROS Her mother said she had colic as an infant. She hates amusement parks. She cannot read in a car.

FH: Her mother and father both get sinus headaches.

Page 26: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Migraine Treatment (1)Migraine Treatment (1)

• Eliminate triggers– Regular sleep patterns– Stabilize caffeine– Decrease alcohol– Look for cycling with menses

Page 27: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Migraine Treatment (2)Migraine Treatment (2)

• Triptans– Sumatriptan intranasal or subcutaneous– Rizatriptan transbuccal– Zolmitriptan transbuccal

• Dihydroergotamine intranasal

Page 28: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Case #2

 

Nancy is a 42 year old woman c/o headache.

 

She has a headache most of the time for the past 6 months. She had intermittent headaches since menarche. They responded to ibuprofen until the past year. The headaches became as frequent as 2-3 per week. She saw a doctor who prescribed Fiorinal. The headaches initially responded to Fiorinal, but gradually became worse and daily. She awakens with a dull bifrontal headache almost every day. By midmorning the pain is worse and involves her neck. She takes 6-8 Fiorinal every day. She avoids caffeine, alcohol, and chocolate.

Page 29: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Chronic Daily Headache Chronic Daily Headache TreatmentTreatment

• Treat underlying migraine– Trigger avoidance– Triptan or dihydroergotamine

• Preventive – Divalproex (Depakote)– Amitriptyline

Page 30: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Case #3

Diane is a 35 year old woman c/o headache.

She was well until 10 days ago when she awoke at 2 AM with extreme pain behind the right eye. She describes the pain as boring like a drill, lasting for 10 minutes. The same pain returned an hour later, accompanied by right eye tearing and watery unilateral rhinorrhea. She reports 2-4 nearly identical episodes for 8/10 past days. She went to an ER the second night, but the headache had passed. She was given a prescription for Tylenol #3, which she took once and vomited. She admits to rare headaches in the past, which are not remarkable. She fell from a horse on vacation 2 years ago with a brief loss of consciousness. She was hospitalized for observation for 1 night. She takes no medications. She is married, no children, no contraception, works as an accountant, lives in Downers Grove in her own home.

FH Her brother committed suicide at age 39. He had disabling headaches that she thinks were similar to hers.

Page 31: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Cluster Headache TreatmentCluster Headache Treatment

• High-flow inhaled oxygen

• Triptan injection or intranasal

• 4% lidocaine 1 mL in ipsilateral nostril

Page 32: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Case #4

Stu is a 49 year old man c/o headache.

While engaged in sexual intercourse with his wife this morning, he developed the sudden onset of the worst headache of his life. The pain was sharp, constant, in the back of the head, radiating through the vertex, maximal at onset, lasted for 20 minutes and remitted completely. He could only lie still during the headache. He did not take any medication. He is apprehensive now but feels otherwise perfectly well.

PH He has a 10 year history of hypertension, controlled on HCTZ 25 mg and atenolol 50 mg daily. His cholesterol was 245 six months ago. He is trying to exercise and lose weight in order to avoid more medication. He admits to very rare mild headaches.

PE Height 6 feet; weight 249 pounds dressed. BP 140/85, pulse 62 regular. Heart, lungs, and neurological exam are completely normal.

Page 33: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Thunderclap HeadacheThunderclap Headache

• Clinical emergency to R/O subarachnoid hemorrhage

• CT w/o contrast highly sensitive & specific for subarachnoid hemorrhage

• LP mandatorymandatory if CT is negative• MRA if suspect cerebral venous sinus

thrombosis or arterial dissection• Headache is benign and infrequently recurs

Page 34: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Case #5

Marianne is a 38 year old woman c/o headache.

She started having sinus headaches as a teenager. She has been on antibiotic therapy innumerable times. Her sinuses always hurt, sometimes worse than others. The pain is dull & bifrontal. She began taking ibuprofen +/- Vicodin. She feels they help a little and takes at least some every day. Headaches are daily for at least 6 months.

PMH Recent CT scan of the sinuses show mucosal thickening and air fluid levels. She underwent a right Caldwell-Luc procedure (maxillary antrostomy) 4 years ago. She was diagnosed with Hashimoto disease last year and takes levothyroxine 75 mcg daily.

SH She is single. She is not sexually active and has never taken OCP. She misses 3-4 days of work each month. She is an office manager who lost her last job because of absences. She is afraid she will lose this job also. She likes her job and has excellent performance appraisals except for absences.

PE Height 5’ 4”; weight 262 pounds. Blood pressure 150/90, pulse 72, temperature 37.1. Mild percussion tenderness both maxillary and frontal sinus areas. Funduscopy and neurological exam are completely normal.

Page 35: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Pearls (1)Pearls (1)

• Find the best dose of a triptan

• Treat only two headaches a week

• Do not use oral medications if nausea occurs; gastroparesis is part of migraine

• Always use preventive therapy– if > 5 headaches in a month– for chronic daily headache

Page 36: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Pearls (2)Pearls (2)

• “Sinus” headache is really migraine

• “Tension-headache” if it exists, is mild by definition. – People do not spend money to see doctors for

mild conditions.

• Methysergide works well for menstrual migraine

Page 37: HEADACHE Workshop on Syndrome Recognition and Management James J. Foody, MD, FACP Feinberg School of Medicine Northwestern University.

Pearls (3)Pearls (3)

• Always tell migraine patients that they do not have a brain tumor

or

• Get an imaging study