Table of Contents

Headache

Red flags warranting further Ix or referral:

Common primary headaches

Migraine without aura criteria
• Headache lasting 4 hours to 3 days
• Nausea/vomiting and/or light and noise sensitivity
2 of the following:
1. Unilateral pain
2. Moderate or severe intensity pain
3. Aggravation by simple physical activity
4. Pulsating pain
Migraine with aura criteria
At least 3 of the following:
1. Reversible focal brainstem or cortical dysfunction
2. Aura develops over >4 minutes, or 2 auras in succession
3. Each aura <60 mins
4. Headache <60 mins following aura
Episodic tension-type headache criteria
• Duration 30 minutes to 7 days
• No nausea/vomiting; may have light or noise sensitivity (not both)
At least 2 of the following:
1. Mild or moderate intensity pain
2. Bilateral pain
3. No aggravation by simple physical activity
4. Pressing or tight (non-pulsating) pain
Chronic tension-type headache criteria
• >15 days pain per month, for >6 months
• No vomiting; one only of nausea, light sensitivity, noise sensitivity
At least 2 of the following:
1. Mild or moderate intensity pain
2. Bilateral pain
3. No aggravation by simple physical activity
4. Pressing or tight (non-pulsating) pain
Cluster headache criteria
• unilateral, esp around/behind the eye
• almost always stay the same side for life
• variable types of pain, but severe, from sharp to throbbing
• accompanying eye redness or watering or other eye changes
• facial sweating
• usually lasts 15/60 - 3/24

Secondary Headaches

• Intracranial bleeds
• infection eg Meningitis/encephalitis
• medication overuse headache
• post-traumatic
• intracranial hypertension
• toxic eg alcohol, CO
• neoplastic

Migraine

Differentiating Migraine from TIA/Stroke in the ED is difficult:

  • The risk of stroke is twice as high in migraine with aura patients, both between (migraine related stroke) and during attacks (migraine infarction)
  • stroke risk is increased in women, smokers, oral contraceptive use, those with recent onset of migraine, and age <45yr

Migraine with brainstem aura (Bickerstaff's) migraine

The International Classification of headache disorders outlined the following criteria for the diagnosis of basilar migraine.

Orgasmic headache

Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis

NCBI Cavernous Sinus Thrombosis

Chiari Malformation

Chiari Malformation - raredisease.org
Emed - Chiari

Investigation strategy

Acute management


References include:

Headache in over 12s NICE 2015
Migraine - Dx & Mx
Chronic Daily Headache - Dx & Mx
Headache - Dx & Mx
Brit Assoc Guidelines 2010
https://touchneurology.com/cluster-headache-diagnosis-and-treatment/
J Neurol Neurosurg Psych: orgasmic headache and MCA dissection case review
Migraine and stroke - A link?
Migraine and Stroke article 2017
https://rarediseases.org/rare-diseases/hemiplegic-migraine/
Basilar migraine review 2020
cuh_headache_pathway_july_2016.pdf