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Cluster headache
From WikEM
Contents
Background
- Occur most often in middle aged men
- Classically occur in "clusters" over days to weeks typically at the same time of day and same anatomical location.
- Triggers may be alcohol, nitroglycerin, histamine
Definition[1]
At least 5 attacks of headache fulfilling the following criteria:
- Severe unilateral orbital, supraorbital, or temporal pain lasting 15–180 min if untreated
- Headache accompanied by at least one of the following:
- Ipsilateral conjunctival injection and/or lacrimation
- Ipsilateral nasal congestion and/or rhinorrhea
- Ipsilateral eyelid edema
- Ipsilateral forehead and facial sweating
- Ipsilateral miosis and/or ptosis
- A sense of restlessness or agitation
- Attacks have a frequency from one every other day to eight per day
- Not attributed to another disorder
Differential Diagnosis
Headache
Common
- Migraine headache
- Tension headache
- Cluster headache
Killers
- Meningitis/encephalitis
- Retropharyngeal abscess
- Intracranial Hemorrhage (ICH)
- SAH / sentinel bleed
- Acute obstructive hydrocephalus
- Space occupying lesions
- CVA
- Carbon monoxide poisoning
- Basilar artery dissection
- Preeclampsia
- Cerebral venous thrombosis
- Hypertensive emergency
- Depression
Maimers
- Temporal arteritis
- Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (aka Pseudotumor Cerebri)
- Acute Glaucoma
- Acute sinusitis
- Cavernous sinus thrombosis or cerebral sinus thrombosis
Others
- Trigeminal neuralgia
- TMJ pain
- Post-lumbar puncture headache
- Dehydration
- Analgesia abuse
- Various ocular and dental problems
- Herpes zoster ophthalmicus
- Herpes zoster oticus
- Cryptococcosis
- Febrile headache (e.g. pyelonephritis, nonspecific viral infection)
- Ophthalmoplegic migraine
- Superior Vena Cava Syndrome
Aseptic Meningitis
- Viral
- Varicella
- Herpes
- Enterovirus
- West Nile
- Tuberculosis
- Lyme disease
- Syphilis
- Drug induced aseptic meningitis
- Fungal (AIDS, transplant, chemotherapy, chronic steroid use)
- Noninfectious
- Sarcoidosis
- Vasculitis
- Connective tissues disease
Evaluation
- Consider other emergent causes of headache based on H&P
- Consider CT, LP, and/or eye pathology
- Typically a clinical diagnosis
Management
- High-flow O2 (effective in 70% of patients)[2]
- Intranasal lidocaine 4%
- DHE
- Sumatriptan
- Intranasal zolmitriptan
- Subcutaneous or IM dihydroergotamine and intranasal sumatriptan are additional options
Disposition
- Normally outpatient