London Strategic Clinical Networks London Neuroscience Strategic Clinical Network Adult with headache Problem-specific video guides to diagnosing patients and helping them with management and prevention If episodic headache How to achieve a working diagnosis ? migraine migraine migraine medication menstrual migraine migraine and the contraceptive pill tension type cluster chronic migraine chronic tension type medication over-use new daily persistent to the types of episodic headache What are the red flag features ? If daily headache i.e. occuring greater than 50% of days If headache duration less than 6 months, consider serious cause migraine medication over-use Who to refer and where ? About specialist headache services If other secondary headache return to How to achieve a working diagnosis ? If headache duration greater than 6 months, serious cause unlikely When is a brain scan helpful ? … and chronic headache If patient is responding If patient is not responding or there are complicating co-morbidities Refer patient to specialist headache services other cluster tension type tension type cluster If serious problem not suspected If serious problem suspected Refer patient to specialist headache services Consider other acute cause: TMJ dysfunction Cervicogenic headache Occipital neuralgia Sinusitis Introduction … Diagnosing … Managing … Preventing … Find out more …
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London Strategic Clinical Networks
London Neuroscience Strategic Clinical Network
Adult with headacheProblem-specific video guides to diagnosing patients and helping them with management and prevention
If episodic headache
How to achieve a working diagnosis ?
migraine
migraine
migraine medication
menstrual migraine
migraine and the contraceptive pill
tension type cluster chronic migraine
chronic tension type
medication over-use
new daily persistent
to the types of episodic headache What are the red flag features ?
If daily headache i.e. occuring greater than 50% of days
If headache duration less than 6 months, consider serious cause
migraine medication over-use
Who to refer and where ?
About specialist headache services
If other secondary headache return to How to achieve a working diagnosis ?
If headache duration greater than 6 months, serious cause unlikely
When is a brain scan helpful ?
… and chronic headache
If patient is responding If patient is not responding or there are complicating co-morbidities
Refer patient to specialist headache services
other
clustertension type
tension type cluster
If serious problem not suspected
If serious problem suspected
Refer patient to specialist headache services
Consider other acute cause:TMJ dysfunctionCervicogenic headacheOccipital neuralgiaSinusitis
Progressive headacheSudden inset ‘worst ever‘ headacheJaw claudication and scalp tendernessSignificant fever or systemic upsetNew altered headache in elderlyNew altered headache in immunocompromisedNew altered headache in patient with known malignancyExamination abnormal:Eye movementsFundi e.g. papilledemaPupils and pupillary reactionsLimb and or gait ataxiaTendon reflexes / plantar
Red flag features
At headache onset:Analgesia: NSAID e.g. Ibuprofen 400–600 mg or Naproxen 250–500 mgAnti-emetic: e.g. Metoclopramide 10 mg, Domperidone 10–20 mgSumatriptan 50–100 mgAll up to 6 times / month
Migraine headache acute treatment options
Analgesia: NSAID e.g. Ibuprofen 400 mg or Naproxen 250–500 mg PRNAvoid opiates and compound analgesia
Tension type headache acute treatment options
Subcut injection 6 mg, Sumatriptan as needed for acute episodeNasal Sumatriptan or Zolmitriptan as neededOxygen 100% 10–12 l/min for 10–12 minsPrednisolone 40–60 mg for 7–10 days
Cluster headache acute treatment options
For neuralgia:Carbamazepine 200–800 mg daily on two divided doses
For migraine, tension type and daily headaches:Monitor and adjust treatmentConsider withdrawing preventative rx after 4–6 monthsAvoid increasing analgesic use
Episodic headache management options
1 History takingHistory of presentation: headache history, medical history, treatment history.
2 Red flagHeadache duration, headache characteristics, patient characteristics. Associated neurological and systemic features. Screening. Red flag features but not a red flag.
3 Brain scan and blood testsUse: diagnosis, anxiety. CT and MRI. Refining a diagnosis. Headache but a normal brain scan, discovery of abnormalities not linked to headache. Blood tests – inflammatory markers.
5a Episodic migraine diagnosisHeadache characteristics, duration and intensity.
5b Episodic tension type headache diagnosisHeadache characteristics. Migraine v tension type same or different. Approach to take.
5c Episodic cluster headache diagnosisHeadache characteristics, attack patterns, severity, patient responses, triggers, why diagnosis can be missed.
5d Other episodic headachesTrigeminal neuralgia and cluster headache. Trigeminal autonomic cephalgia.
6 Introduction to chronic daily headacheDefinition and duration.
6a Chronic migraine – common cause of daily headachePrevalence and characteristics.
6b Chronic tension type – common cause of daily headacheCharacteristics.
6c Medication overuse – common cause of daily headacheDefinition, analgesia thresholds/use, characteristics.
6d New daily – common cause of daily headacheCharacteristics, primary and secondary. Secondary: spontaneous intracranial hypotension, intracranial hypertension, intracranial venous thrombosis. Primary: Hemicrania continua.
13 Cluster headacheTreatment for acute attacks, treatment to shorten bouts, treatment to prevent bouts occurring. Acute attacks – triptans, oxygen (Ouch uk – https://ouchuk.org/sites/default/files/downloads/home_oxygen_order_form_parta_dv.pdf). Transitional treatment – steroids, nerve block. Preventative medications.
13 Medication overuseExplanation to patient, treatment strategies, patient characteristics.
13 Specialist headache servicesCharacteristics and conditions managed: time, expertise in use of rating scale, medication history, patient information, diagnostic investigations, treatment – medication, nerve blocks, Botox, detox.
List of the videos
Pathway created and updated by Dr Bal Athwal, Consultant Neurologist, Royal Free London Hospital with contributions from Dr Nassif Mansour, GP, Kingston CCGPodcasts by London Neuroscience Strategic Clinical Network shared learning working group September 2014Prof Lionel Ginsberg Dr Bal Athwal Dr Nassif Mansour Dr Philippa CurranVersion 1.7 June 2015 London Neuroscience SCN