General Information About Headaches
An estimated 45 million Americans experience chronic
headaches. For at least half of these people, the problem is severe and
sometimes disabling. It can also be costly: headache sufferers make over
8 million visits a year to doctor's offices. Migraine victims alone lose
over 157 million workdays because of headache pain.
Understanding why headaches occur and improving headache treatment are
among the research goals of the National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke (NINDS). As the leading supporter of brain research
in the Federal Government, the NINDS also supports and conducts studies
to improve the diagnosis of headaches and to find ways to prevent them.
Why Does A Headache Hurt?
What hurts when you have a headache? Several areas of the head can hurt,
including a network of nerves which extends over the scalp and certain
nerves in the face, mouth, and throat. Also sensitive to pain, because
they contain delicate nerve fibers, are the muscles of the head and
blood vessels found along the surface and at the base of the brain.
The bones of the skull and tissues of the brain itself, however, never
hurt, because they lack pain-sensitive nerve fibers.
The ends of these pain-sensitive nerves, called nociceptors, can be
stimulated by stress, muscular tension, dilated blood vessels, and other
triggers of headache. Once stimulated, a nociceptor sends a message up
the length of the nerve fiber to the nerve cells in the brain, signaling
that a part of the body hurts. The message is determined by the location
of the nociceptor. A person who suddenly realizes "My toe
hurts," is responding to nociceptors in the foot that have been
stimulated by the stubbing of a toe.
A number of chemicals help transmit pain-related information to the
brain. Some of these chemicals are natural painkilling proteins called
endorphins, Greek for "the morphine within." One theory
suggests that people who suffer from severe headache and other types of
chronic pain have lower levels of endorphins than people who are
generally pain free.
When Should You See A Physician?
Not all headaches require medical attention. Some result from missed
meals or occasional muscle tension and are easily remedied. But some
types of headache are signals of more serious disorders, and call for
prompt medical care. These include:
- Sudden, severe headache.
- Headache associated with convulsions.
- Headache accompanied by confusion or loss of
consciousness.
- Headache following a blow on the head.
- Headache associated with pain in the eye or ear.
- Persistent headache in a person who was previously
headache free.
- Recurring headache in children.
- Headache associated with fever.
- Headache which interferes with normal life.
A headache sufferer usually seeks help from a family
practitioner. If the problem is not relieved by standard treatments, the
patient may then be referred to a specialist - perhaps an internist or
neurologist. Additional referrals may be made to psychologists.
What Tests Are Used To Diagnose Headache?
Diagnosing a headache is like playing Twenty Questions. Experts agree
that a detailed question-and-answer session with a patient can often
produce enough information for a diagnosis. Many types of headaches have
clear-cut symptoms which fall into an easily recognizable pattern.
Patients may be asked:
- How often do you have headaches?
- Where is the pain?
- How long do the headaches last?
- When did you first develop headaches?
The patient's sleep habits and family and work
situations may also be probed.
Most physicians will also obtain a full medical history from the
patient, inquiring about past head trauma or surgery and about the use
of medications. A blood test may be ordered to screen for thyroid
disease, anemia, or infections which might cause a headache. X-rays may
be taken to rule out the possibility of a brain tumor or blood clot.
A test called an electroencephalogram (EEG) may be given to measure
brain activity. EEG's can indicate a malfunction in the brain, but they
cannot usually pinpoint a problem that might be causing a headache. A
physician may suggest that a patient with unusual headaches undergo a
computed tomographic (CT) scan and/or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
The CT scan produces images of the brain that show structures or
variations in the density of different types of tissue. The scan enables
the physician to distinguish, for example, between a bleeding blood
vessel in the brain and a brain tumor, and is an important diagnostic
tool in cases of headache associated with brain lesions or other serious
disease. MRI uses magnetic fields and radio waves to produce an image
that provides information about the structure and biochemistry of the
brain.
An eye exam is usually performed to check for weakness in the eye muscle
or unequal pupil size. Both of these symptoms are evidence of an
aneurysm—an abnormal ballooning of a blood vessel. A physician who
suspects that a headache patient has an aneurysm may also order an
angiogram. In this test, a special fluid which can be seen on an X-ray
is injected into the patient and carried in the bloodstream to the brain
to reveal any abnormalities in the blood vessels there.
Thermography, an experimental technique for diagnosing headache,
promises to become a useful clinical tool. In thermography, an infrared
camera converts skin temperature into a color picture or thermogram with
different degrees of heat appearing as different colors. Skin
temperature is affected primarily by blood flow. Research scientists
have found that thermograms of headache patients show strikingly
different heat patterns from those of people who never or rarely get
headaches.
A physician analyzes the results of all these diagnostic tests along
with a patient's medical history in order to arrive at a diagnosis.
Headaches are diagnosed as:
- Vascular.
- Muscle contraction (tension).
- Traction.
- Inflammatory.
Vascular headaches - a group that includes the
well-known migraine - are so named because they are thought to involve
abnormal function of the brain's blood vessels or vascular system.
Muscle contraction headaches appear to involve the tightening or tensing
of facial and neck muscles. Traction and inflammatory headaches are
symptoms of other disorders, ranging from stroke to sinus infection.
Some people have more than one type of headache.
When Headaches Are A Warning Of A More Serious Condition
Like other types of pain, headaches can serve as
warning signals of more serious disorders. This is particularly true for
headaches caused by traction or inflammation.
Traction headaches can occur if the pain-sensitive parts of the head are
pulled, stretched, or displaced, as, for example, when eye muscles are
tensed to compensate for eyestrain. Headaches caused by inflammation
include those related to meningitis as well as those resulting from
diseases of the sinuses, spine, neck, ears, and teeth. Ear and tooth
infections and glaucoma can cause headaches. In oral and dental
disorders, headache is experienced as pain in the entire head, including
the face.
Traction and inflammatory headaches are treated by curing the underlying
problem. This may involve surgery, antibiotics or other drugs.
Characteristics of the various types of traction and inflammatory
headaches vary by disorder:
- Brain tumor.
Brain tumors are diagnosed in about 11,000 people every year. As
they grow, these tumors sometimes cause headache by pushing on the
outer layer of nerve tissue that covers the brain or by pressing
against pain-sensitive blood vessel walls. Headache resulting from a
brain tumor may be periodic or continuous. Typically, it feels like
a strong pressure is being applied to the head. The pain is relieved
when the tumor is destroyed by surgery, radiation, or chemotherapy.
- Stroke.
Headache may accompany several conditions that can lead to stroke,
including hypertension or high blood pressure, arteriosclerosis, and
heart disease. Headaches are also associated with completed stroke,
when brain cells die from lack of sufficient oxygen.
Many stroke-related headaches can be prevented by careful management
of the patient's condition through diet, exercise, and medication.
Mild to moderate headaches are associated with transient ischemic
attacks (TIA's), sometimes called “mini-strokes,” which result
from a temporary lack of blood supply to the brain. The head pain
occurs near the clot or lesion that blocks blood flow. The
similarity between migraine and symptoms of TIA can cause problems
in diagnosis. The rare person under age 40 who suffers a TIA may be
misdiagnosed as having migraine; similarly, TIA-prone older patients
who suffer migraine may be misdiagnosed as having stroke-related
headaches.
- Spinal tap.
About one-fourth of the people who undergo a lumbar puncture or
spinal tap develop a headache. Many scientists believe these
headaches result from leakage of the cerebrospinal fluid that flows
through pain-sensitive membranes around the brain and down to the
spinal cord. The fluid, they suggest, drains through the tiny hole
created by the spinal tap needle, causing the membranes to rub
painfully against the bony skull. Since headache pain occurs only
when the patient stands up, the "cure" is to remain lying
down until the headache runs its course - anywhere from a few hours
to several days.
- Head trauma.
Headaches may develop after a blow to the head, either immediately
or months later. There is little relationship between the severity
of the trauma and the intensity of headache pain. One cause of
trauma headache is scar formation in the scalp. Another is ruptured
blood vessels which result in an accumulation of blood called a
hematoma. This mass of blood can displace brain tissue and cause
headaches as well as weakness, confusion, memory loss, and seizures.
Hematomas can be drained to produce rapid relief of symptoms.
- Arteritis & Meningitis.
Arteritis, an inflammation of certain arteries in the head,
primarily affects people over age 50. Symptoms include throbbing
headache, fever, and loss of appetite. Some patients experience
blurring or loss of vision. Prompt treatment with corticosteroid
drugs helps to relieve symptoms.
Headaches are also caused by infections of meninges, the brain's
outer covering, and phlebitis, a vein inflammation.
- Trigeminal Neuralgia.
Trigeminal neuralgia, or tic douloureux, results from a disorder of
the trigeminal nerve. This nerve supplies the face, teeth, mouth,
and nasal cavity with feeling and also enables the mouth muscles to
chew. Symptoms are headache and intense facial pain that comes in
short, excruciating jabs set off by the slightest touch to or
movement of trigger points in the face or mouth. People with
trigeminal neuralgia often fear brushing their teeth or chewing on
the side of the mouth that is affected. Many trigeminal neuralgia
patients are controlled with drugs, including carbamazepine.
Patients who do not respond to drugs may be helped by surgery on the
trigeminal nerve.
- Sinus infection.
In a condition called acute sinusitis, a viral or bacterial
infection of the upper respiratory tract spreads to the membrane
which lines the sinus cavities. When one or all four of these
cavities are filled with bacterial or viral fluid, they become
inflamed, causing pain and sometimes headache. Treatment of acute
sinusitis includes antibiotics, analgesics, and decongestants.
Chronic sinusitis may be caused by an allergy to such irritants as
dust, ragweed, animal hair, and smoke. Research scientists disagree
about whether chronic sinusitis triggers headache.
Migraine Headaches: One Type Of Vascular Headache
The most common type of vascular headache is migraine.
Migraine headaches are usually characterized by severe pain on one or
both sides of the head, an upset stomach, and at times disturbed vision.
Former basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar remembers experiencing his
first migraine at age 14. The pain was unlike the discomfort of his
previous mild headaches.
"When I got this one I thought, 'This is a headache'," he
says. "The pain was intense and I felt nausea and a great
sensitivity to light. All I could think about was when it would stop. I
sat in a dark room for an hour and it passed."
Symptoms Of Migraine
Abdul-Jabbar's sensitivity to light is a standard symptom of the two
most prevalent types of migraine-caused headache: classic and common.
The major difference between the two types is the appearance of
neurological symptoms 10 to 30 minutes before a classic migraine attack.
These symptoms are called an aura. The person may see flashing lights or
zigzag lines, or may temporarily lose vision. Other classic symptoms
include speech difficulty, weakness of an arm or leg, tingling of the
face or hands, and confusion.
The pain of a classic migraine headache is described as intense,
throbbing, or pounding and is felt in the forehead, temple, ear, jaw, or
around the eye. Classic migraine starts on one side of the head but may
eventually spread to the other side. An attack lasts 1 to 2 pain-wracked
days.
The common migraine - a term that reflects the disorder's greater
occurrence in the general population - is not preceded by an aura. But
some people experience a variety of vague symptoms beforehand, including
mental fuzziness, mood changes, fatigue, and unusual retention of
fluids. During the headache phase of a common migraine, a person may
have diarrhea and increased urination, as well as nausea and vomiting.
Common migraine pain can last 3 or 4 days.
Both classic and common migraine can strike as often as several times a
week, or as rarely as once every few years. Both types can occur at any
time. Some people, however, experience migraines at predictable times -
near the days of menstruation or every Saturday morning after a
stressful week of work.
The Migraine Process
Research scientists are unclear about the precise cause of migraine
headaches. There seems to be general agreement, however, that a key
element is blood flow changes in the brain. People who get migraine
headaches appear to have blood vessels that overreact to various
triggers.
Scientists have devised one theory of migraine which explains these
blood flow changes and also certain biochemical changes that may be
involved in the headache process. According to this theory, the nervous
system responds to a trigger such as stress by creating a spasm in the
nerve-rich arteries at the base of the brain. The spasm closes down or
constricts several arteries supplying blood to the brain, including the
scalp artery and the carotid or neck arteries.
As these arteries constrict, the flow of blood to the brain is reduced.
At the same time, blood-clotting particles called platelets clump
together - a process which is believed to release a chemical called
serotonin. Serotonin acts as a powerful constrictor of arteries, further
reducing the blood supply to the brain.
Reduced blood flow decreases the brain's supply of oxygen. Symptoms
signaling a headache, such as distorted vision or speech, may then
result, similar to symptoms of stroke.
Reacting to the reduced oxygen supply, certain arteries within the brain
open wider to meet the brain's energy needs. This widening or dilation
spreads, finally affecting the neck and scalp arteries. The dilation of
these arteries triggers the release of pain-producing substances called
prostaglandins from various tissues and blood cells. Chemicals which
cause inflammation and swelling, and substances which increase
sensitivity to pain are also released. The circulation of these
chemicals and the dilation of the scalp arteries stimulate the
pain-sensitive nociceptors. The result, according to this theory: a
throbbing pain in the head.
Women & Migraine
Although both males and females seem to be equally affected by migraine,
the condition is more common in adult women. Both sexes may develop
migraine in infancy, but most often the disorder begins between the ages
of 5 and 35.
The relationship between female hormones and migraine is still unclear.
Women may have "menstrual migraine"- headaches around the time
of their menstrual period - which may disappear during pregnancy. Other
women develop migraine for the first time when they are pregnant. Some
are first affected after menopause.
The effect of oral contraceptives on headaches is perplexing. Scientists
report that some women with migraine who take birth control pills
experience more frequent and severe attacks. However, a small percentage
of women have fewer and less severe migraine headaches when they take
birth control pills. And normal women who do not suffer from headaches
may develop migraines as a side effect when they use oral
contraceptives. Investigators around the world are studying hormonal
changes in women with migraine in the hope of identifying the specific
ways these naturally occurring chemicals cause headaches.
Triggers Of Migraine Headache
Although many sufferers have a family history of migraine, the exact
hereditary nature of this condition is still unknown. People who get
migraines are thought to have an inherited abnormality in the regulation
of blood vessels.
"It's like a cocked gun with a hair trigger," explains one
specialist. "A person is born with a potential for migraine and the
headache is triggered by things that are really not so terrible."
These triggers include stress and other normal emotions, as well as
biological and environmental conditions. Fatigue, glaring or flickering
lights, the weather, and certain foods can set off migraine. It may seem
hard to believe that eating such seemingly harmless foods as yogurt,
nuts, and lima beans can result in a painful migraine headache. However,
some scientists believe that these foods and several others contain
chemical substances, such as tyramine, which constrict arteries - the
first step of the migraine process. Other scientists believe that foods
cause headaches by setting off an allergic reaction in susceptible
people.
While a food-triggered migraine usually occurs soon after eating, other
triggers may not cause immediate pain. Scientists report that people can
develop migraine not only during a period of stress but also afterwards
when their vascular systems are still reacting. For example, migraines
that wake people up in the middle of the night are believed to result
from a delayed reaction to stress.
Other Forms Of Migraine
In addition to classic and common, migraine headache can take several
other forms:
- Patients with hemiplegic migraine have temporary
paralysis on one side of the body, a condition known as hemiplegia.
Some people may experience vision problems and vertigo - a feeling
that the world is spinning. These symptoms begin 10 to 90 minutes
before the onset of headache pain.
- In ophthalmoplegic migraine, the pain is around the
eye and is associated with a droopy eyelid, double vision, and other
sight problems.
- Basilar artery migraine involves a disturbance of a
major brain artery. Preheadache symptoms include vertigo, double
vision, and poor muscular coordination. This type of migraine occurs
primarily in adolescent and young adult women and is often
associated with the menstrual cycle.
- Benign exertional headache is brought on by
running, lifting, coughing, sneezing, or bending. The headache
begins at the onset of activity, and pain rarely lasts more than
several minutes.
- Status migrainosus is a rare and severe type of
migraine that can last 72 hours or longer. The pain and nausea are
so intense that people who have this type of headache must be
hospitalized. The use of certain drugs can trigger status
migrainosus. Neurologists report that many of their status
migrainosus patients were depressed and anxious before they
experienced headache attacks.
- Headache-free migraine is characterized by such
migraine symptoms as visual problems, nausea, vomiting,
constipation, or diarrhea. Patients, however, do not experience head
pain. Headache specialists have suggested that unexplained pain in a
particular part of the body, fever, and dizziness could also be
possible types of headache-free migraine.
Treatment Of Migraine Headaches
During the Stone Age, pieces of a headache sufferer's skull were cut
away with flint instruments to relieve pain. Another unpleasant remedy
used in the British Isles around the ninth Century involved drinking
"the juice of elderseed, cow's brain, and goat's dung dissolved in
vinegar." Fortunately, today's headache patients are spared such
drastic measures.
Drug therapy, biofeedback training, stress reduction, and elimination of
certain foods from the diet are the most common methods of preventing
and controlling migraine and other vascular headaches. Regular exercise,
such as swimming or vigorous walking, can also reduce the frequency and
severity of migraine headaches.
During a migraine headache, temporary relief can sometimes be obtained
by using cold packs or by pressing on the bulging artery found in front
of the ear on the painful side of the head.
Drug Therapy
There are two ways to approach the treatment of migraine headache with
drugs: prevent the attacks, or relieve symptoms after the headache
occurs.
For infrequent migraine, drugs can be taken at the first sign of a
headache in order to stop it or to at least ease the pain. People who
get occasional mild migraine may benefit by taking aspirin or
acetaminophen at the start of an attack. Aspirin raises a person's
tolerance to pain and also discourages clumping of blood platelets.
Small amounts of caffeine may be useful if taken in the early stages of
migraine. But for most migraine sufferers who get moderate to severe
headaches, and for all cluster patients, stronger drugs may be necessary
to control the pain.
One of the most commonly used drugs for the relief of classic and common
migraine symptoms is ergotamine tartrate, a vasoconstrictor which helps
counteract the painful dilation stage of the headache. For optimal
benefit, the drug is taken during the early stages of an attack. If a
migraine has been in progress for about an hour and has passed into the
final throbbing stage, ergotamine tartrate will probably not help.
Because ergotamine tartrate can cause nausea and vomiting, it may be
combined with antinausea drugs. Research scientists caution that
ergotamine tartrate should not be taken in excess or by people who have
angina pectoris, severe hypertension, or vascular, liver, or kidney
disease.
Patients who are unable to take ergotamine tartrate may benefit from
other drugs that constrict dilated blood vessels or help reduce blood
vessel inflammation.
For headaches that occur three or more times a month, preventive
treatment is usually recommended. Drugs used to prevent classic and
common migraine include methysergide maleate, which counteracts blood
vessel constriction; propranolol hydrochloride, which stops blood vessel
dilation; and amitriptyline, an antidepressant.
Antidepressants called MAO inhibitors also prevent migraine. These drugs
block an enzyme called monoamine oxidase which normally helps nerve
cells absorb the artery-constricting brain chemical, serotonin.
MAO inhibitors can have potentially serious side effects - particularly
if taken while ingesting foods or beverages that contain tyramine, a
substance that constricts arteries.
Several drugs for the prevention of migraine have been developed in
recent years, including drugs which mimic the action of serotonin,
including serotonin agonists which mimic the action of this key brain
chemical. Prompt administration of these drugs is important.
Many antimigraine drugs can have adverse side effects. But like most
medicines they are relatively safe when used carefully and under a
physician’s supervision. To avoid long-term side effects of preventive
medications, headache specialists advise patients to reduce the dosage
of these drugs and then to stop taking them as soon as possible.
Biofeedback & Relaxation Training
Drug therapy for migraine is often combined with biofeedback and
relaxation training. Biofeedback refers to a technique that can give
people better control over such body function indicators as blood
pressure, heart rate, temperature, muscle tension, and brain waves.
Thermal biofeedback allows a patient to consciously raise hand
temperature. Some patients who are able to increase hand temperature can
reduce the number and intensity of migraines. The mechanisms underlying
these self-regulation treatments are being studied by research
scientists.
"To succeed in biofeedback," says a headache specialist,
"you must be able to concentrate and you must be motivated to get
well."
A patient learning thermal biofeedback wears a device which transmits
the temperature of an index finger or hand to a monitor. While the
patient tries to warm his hands, the monitor provides feedback either on
a gauge that shows the temperature reading or by emitting a sound or
beep that increases in intensity as the temperature increases. The
patient is not told how to raise hand temperature, but is given
suggestions such as "Imagine that your hands feel very warm and
heavy."
"I have a good imagination," says one headache sufferer who
traded in her medication for thermal biofeedback. The technique
decreased the number and severity of headaches she experienced.
In another type of biofeedback called electromyographic or EMG training,
the patient learns to control muscle tension in the face, neck, and
shoulders.
Either kind of biofeedback may be combined with relaxation training,
during which patients learn to relax the mind and body.
Biofeedback can be practiced at home with a portable monitor. But the
ultimate goal of treatment is to wean the patient from the machine. The
patient can then use biofeedback anywhere at the first sign of a
headache.
The Antimigraine Diet
Scientists estimate that a small percentage of migraine sufferers will
benefit from a treatment program focused solely on eliminating
headache-provoking foods and beverages.
Other migraine patients may be helped by a diet to prevent low blood
sugar. Low blood sugar, or hypoglycemia, can cause dilation of the blood
vessels in the head. This condition can occur after a period without
food: overnight, for example, or when a meal is skipped. People who wake
up in the morning with a headache may be reacting to the low blood sugar
caused by the lack of food overnight.
Treatment for headaches caused by low blood sugar consists of scheduling
smaller, more frequent meals for the patient. A special diet designed to
stabilize the body's sugar-regulating system is sometimes recommended.
For the same reason, many specialists also recommend that migraine
patients avoid oversleeping on weekends. Sleeping late can change the
body's normal blood sugar level and lead to a headache.
Cluster & Other Types Of Vascular Headaches
After migraine, the most common type of vascular
headache is the toxic headache produced by fever. Pneumonia, measles,
mumps, and tonsillitis are among the diseases that can cause severe
toxic vascular headaches. Toxic headaches can also result from the
presence of foreign chemicals in the body. Other kinds of vascular
headaches include "clusters," which cause repeated episodes of
intense pain, and headaches resulting from a rise in blood pressure.
Chemical Culprits
Repeated exposure to nitrite compounds can result in a dull, pounding
headache that may be accompanied by a flushed face. Nitrite, which
dilates blood vessels, is found in such products as heart medicine and
dynamite, but is also used as a chemical to preserve meat. Hot dogs and
other processed meats containing sodium nitrite can cause headaches.
Eating foods prepared with monosodium glutamate (MSG) can result in
headache. Soy sauce, meat tenderizer, and a variety of packaged foods
contain this chemical which is touted as a flavor enhancer.
Headache can also result from exposure to poisons, even common household
varieties like insecticides, carbon tetrachloride, and lead. Children
who ingest flakes of lead paint may develop headaches. So may anyone who
has contact with lead batteries or lead-glazed pottery.
Artists and industrial workers may experience headaches after exposure
to materials that contain chemical solvents. Solvents, like benzene, are
found in turpentine, spray adhesives, rubber cement, and inks.
Drugs such as amphetamines can cause headaches as a side effect. Another
type of drug-related headache occurs during withdrawal from long-term
therapy with the antimigraine drug ergotamine tartrate.
Jokes are often made about alcohol hangovers but the headache associated
with "the morning after" is no laughing matter. Fortunately,
there are several suggested remedies for the pain, including ergotamine
tartrate. The hangover headache may also be reduced by taking honey,
which speeds alcohol metabolism, or caffeine, a constrictor of dilated
arteries. Caffeine, however, can cause headaches as well as cure them.
Heavy coffee drinkers often get headaches when they try to break the
caffeine habit.
Cluster Headaches
Cluster headaches, named for their repeated occurrence in groups or
clusters, begin as a minor pain around one eye, eventually spreading to
that side of the face. The pain quickly intensifies, compelling the
victim to pace the floor or rock in a chair. "You can't lie down,
you're fidgety," explains a cluster patient. "The pain is
unbearable." Other symptoms include a stuffed and runny nose and a
droopy eyelid over a red and tearing eye.
Cluster headaches last between 30 and 45 minutes. But the relief people
feel at the end of an attack is usually mixed with dread as they await a
recurrence. Clusters can strike several times a day or night for several
weeks or months. Then, mysteriously, they may disappear for months or
years. Many people have cluster bouts during the spring and fall. At
their worst, chronic cluster headaches can last continuously for years.
Cluster attacks can strike at any age but usually start between the ages
of 20 and 40. Unlike migraine, cluster headaches are more common in men
and do not run in families. Research scientists have observed certain
physical similarities among people who experience cluster headache. The
typical cluster patient is a tall, muscular man with a ragged facial
appearance and a square, jutting or dimpled chin. The texture of his
coarse skin resembles an orange peel. Women who get clusters may also
have this type of skin.
Studies of cluster patients show that they are likely to have hazel eyes
and that they tend to be heavy smokers and drinkers. Paradoxically, both
nicotine, which constricts arteries, and alcohol, which dilates them,
trigger cluster headaches. The exact connection between these substances
and cluster attacks is not known.
Despite a cluster headache's distinguishing characteristics, its
relative infrequency and similarity to such disorders as sinusitis can
lead to misdiagnosis. Some cluster patients have had tooth extractions,
sinus surgery, or psychiatric treatment in futile efforts to cure their
pain.
Research studies have turned up several clues as to the cause of cluster
headache, but no answers. One clue is found in the thermograms of
untreated cluster patients, which show a "cold spot" of
reduced blood flow above the eye.
The sudden start and brief duration of cluster headaches can make them
difficult to treat; however, research scientists have identified several
effective drugs for these headaches. The antimigraine drug ergotamine
tartrate can subdue a cluster, if taken at the first sign of an attack.
Injections of dihydroergotamine, a form of ergotamine tartrate, are
sometimes used to treat clusters.
Some cluster patients can prevent attacks by taking propranolol or
methysergide. Investigators have also discovered that mild solutions of
cocaine hydrochloride applied inside the nose can quickly stop cluster
headaches in most patients. This treatment may work because it both
blocks pain impulses and constricts blood vessels.
Another option that works for some cluster patients is rapid inhalation
of pure oxygen through a mask for 5 to 15 minutes. The oxygen seems to
ease the pain of cluster headache by reducing blood flow to the brain.
In chronic cases of cluster headache, certain facial nerves may be
surgically cut or destroyed to provide relief. These procedures have had
limited success. Some cluster patients have had facial nerves cut only
to have them regenerate years later.
Painful Pressure
Chronic high blood pressure can cause headache, as can rapid rises in
blood pressure like those experienced during anger, vigorous exercise,
or sexual excitement.
The severe "orgasmic headache" occurs right before orgasm and
is believed to be a vascular headache. Since sudden rupture of a
cerebral blood vessel can occur, this type of headache should be
evaluated by a doctor.
Muscle-Contraction Headaches
It's 5:00 p.m. and your boss has just
asked you to prepare a 20-page briefing paper. Due date: tomorrow.
You're angry and tired and the more you think about the assignment, the
tenser you become. Your teeth clench, your brow wrinkles, and soon you
have a splitting tension headache.
Tension headache is a type of muscle-contraction
headache and is named not only for the role of stress in triggering the
pain, but also for the contraction of neck, face, and scalp muscles
brought on by stressful events. Tension headache is a severe but
temporary form of muscle-contraction headache. The pain is mild to
moderate and feels like pressure is being applied to the head or neck.
The headache usually disappears after the period of stress is over.
Ninety percent of all headaches are classified as tension/muscle
contraction headaches.
By contrast, chronic muscle-contraction headaches can last for weeks,
months, and sometimes years. The pain of these headaches is often
described as a tight band around the head or a feeling that the head and
neck are in a cast. "It feels like somebody is tightening a giant
vise around my head," says one patient. The pain is steady, and is
usually felt on both sides of the head. Chronic muscle-contraction
headaches can cause sore scalps - even combing one's hair can be
painful.
Many scientists believe that the primary cause of the pain of
muscle-contraction headache is sustained muscle tension. Other studies
suggest that restricted blood flow may cause or contribute to the pain.
Occasionally, muscle-contraction headaches will be accompanied by
nausea, vomiting, and blurred vision, but there is no preheadache
syndrome as with migraine. Muscle-contraction headaches have not been
linked to hormones or foods, as has migraine, nor is there a strong
hereditary connection.
Research has shown that for many people, chronic muscle-contraction
headaches are caused by depression and anxiety. These people tend to get
their headaches in the early morning or evening when conflicts in the
office or home are anticipated.
Emotional factors are not the only triggers of muscle-contraction
headaches. Certain physical postures that tense head and neck muscles -
such as holding one's chin down while reading - can lead to head and
neck pain. So can prolonged writing under poor light, or holding a phone
between the shoulder and ear, or even gum-chewing.
More serious problems that can cause muscle-contraction headaches
include degenerative arthritis of the neck and temporomandibular joint
dysfunction, or TMD. TMD is a disorder of the joint between the temporal
bone (above the ear) and the mandible or lower jaw bone. The disorder
results from poor bite and jaw clenching.
Treatment for muscle-contraction headache varies. The first
consideration is to treat any specific disorder or disease that may be
causing the headache. For example, arthritis of the neck is treated with
anti-inflammatory medication and TMD may be helped by corrective devices
for the mouth and jaw.
Acute tension headaches not associated with a disease are treated with
muscle relaxants and analgesics like aspirin and acetaminophen. Stronger
analgesics, such as propoxyphene and codeine, are sometimes prescribed.
As prolonged use of these drugs can lead to dependence, patients taking
them should have periodic medical checkups and follow their physicians'
instructions carefully.
Nondrug therapy for chronic muscle-contraction headaches includes
biofeedback, relaxation training, and counseling. A technique called
cognitive restructuring teaches people to change their attitudes and
responses to stress. Patients might be encouraged, for example, to
imagine that they are coping successfully with a stressful situation. In
progressive relaxation therapy, patients are taught to first tense and
then relax individual muscle groups. Finally, the patient tries to relax
his or her whole body. Many people imagine a peaceful scene - such as
lying on the beach or by a beautiful lake. Passive relaxation does not
involve tensing of muscles. Instead, patients are encouraged to focus on
different muscles, suggesting that they relax. Some people might think
to themselves, "Relax" or "My muscles feel warm."
People with chronic muscle-contraction headaches may also be helped by
taking antidepressants or MAO inhibitors. Mixed muscle-contraction and
migraine headaches are sometimes treated with barbiturate compounds,
which slow down nerve function in the brain and spinal cord.
People who suffer infrequent muscle-contraction headaches may benefit
from a hot shower or moist heat applied to the back of the neck.
Cervical collars are sometimes recommended as an aid to good posture.
Physical therapy, massage, and gentle exercise of the neck may also be
helpful.
Additional Resources & Information About Headaches
If you suffer from headaches and none of the standard
treatments help, do not despair. Some people find that their headaches
disappear once they deal with a troubled marriage, pass their law board
exams, or resolve some other stressful problem. Others find that if they
control their psychological reaction to stress, the headaches disappear.
"I had migraines for several years," says one woman, “and
then they went away. I think it was because I lowered my personal goals
in life. Today, even though I have 100 things to do at night, I don't
worry about it. I learned to say no."
For those who cannot say no, or who get headaches anyway, today's
headache research offers hope. The work of the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)-supported scientists around
the world promises to improve our understanding of this complex disorder
and provide better tools to treat it.
Source: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institues of Health, October 1996
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