Second Line
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Persistent headache unresponsive to usual measures
- Unclear headache diagnosis
Discharge Criteria
- Patients with moderate to complete pain relief, a normal neurologic exam, and with a confident diagnosis of cluster headache
- Consider prescribing oxygen and/or SC sumatriptan for management at home
Issues for Referral
Follow-up with a neurologist should be arranged
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- History is essential to diagnose cluster headache as pain may be improved upon presentation
- 100% oxygen should be the 1st treatment initiated
- Cluster headaches may be so severe that they lead to suicide
- Follow-up is essential to manage clusters which may last months
ADDITIONAL READING
- Cohen AS,Burns B, GoadsbyPJ. High-flow oxygen for treatment of cluster headache: A randomizedtrial.
JAMA.
2009;302:2451–2457.
- Friedman BW, Grosberg BM. Diagnosis and management of the primary headache disorders in the emergency department setting.
Emerg Med Clin North Am
. 2009;27:71–87.
- McGeeney BE. Cluster Headache Pharmacotherapy.
Am J Ther
. 2005;12:351–358.
- Nesbitt AD, Goadsby PJ. Cluster headache.
BJM
. 2012;344:e2407.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Headache
- Headache, migraine
CODES
ICD9
- 339.00 Cluster headache syndrome, unspecified
- 339.01 Episodic cluster headache
- 339.02 Chronic cluster headache
ICD10
- G44.009 Cluster headache syndrome, unspecified, not intractable
- G44.019 Episodic cluster headache, not intractable
- G44.029 Chronic cluster headache, not intractable
HEADACHE, MIGRAINE
Benjamin W. Friedman
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Chronic episodic headache disorder
- Neurovascular pathophysiology:
- Aberrant trigeminal nerve activation
- Activation of nociceptive pathways within brainstem
- Vascular dilation reactive rather than causative
- No longer considered primarily a vascular headache
- Disordered sensory processing and autonomic dysfunction
- Cortical spreading depression underlies aura
- 1 million ED visits per year
- Causes majority of ED headache visits
- 3× as common in women
- Prevalence peaks in 4th decade of life
- Established criteria for migraine without aura:
- A. 5 attacks fulfilling criteria B, C, D, E
- B. Attack lasts 4–72 hr
- C. Headache has 2 of the following:
- 1. Unilateral location
- 2. Pulsating
- 3. Moderate to severe pain (impairs activities)
- 4. Aggravation by or avoidance of physical activity
- D. During headache, nausea, or vomiting and/or photophobia + phonophobia
- E. Not attributable to other cause
- Migraine with aura:
- Less common
- Classically, reversible neurologic symptoms that precede headache
- Some patients report aura at the same time or after the headache
- Rarer subtypes of migraine include:
- Basilar type migraine
- Dysarthria, vertigo, ataxia, diplopia, or decreased level of consciousness
- Hemiplegic migraine
- Full reversible motor weakness
- Retinal migraine
- Repeated attacks of monocular visual disturbance
Pediatric Considerations
- More commonly bilateral pain and shorter duration of headache
- Associated symptoms may be difficult to elicit and can be inferred from behavior
- Cyclical vomiting syndrome associated with migraine
- High placebo response
ETIOLOGY
Genetic disorder with variable penetrance, influenced by the environmental factors
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- May be precipitated by chocolate, cheese, nuts, alcohol, sulfites, monosodium glutamate (MSG), stress, or menstruation
- Prodrome precedes migraine by several days
- May consist of cognitive or emotional alterations, yawning, drowsiness
- Aura precedes migraine by 1 hr
- Most commonly consists of visual or sensory disturbances
- Scintillating scotoma
- Fortification spectra
- Numbness or tingling
- Headache typically unilateral, throbbing
- Sufficiently intense to impair activity
- Can be bilateral
- Usually associated with osmophobia, photophobia, phonophobia, nausea, or vomiting
- Usually gradual onset
- History often reflects similar headache previously
Physical-Exam
- Allodynia (sensitivity to normally non-noxious stimuli) may be present and signifies more refractory migraine
- Physical exam should otherwise be normal
- Physical exam should include exam of fundi and assessment of visual fields
- Elevated blood pressure does not exclude migraine as diagnosis
- Sinus tenderness does not exclude migraine as diagnosis
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- An accurate history and physical exam confirm the diagnosis
- Patients with new headache syndrome may require workup including imaging and spinal fluid analysis
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
Clinical diagnosis: None required
Imaging
Clinical diagnosis: None required
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
Clinical diagnosis: None required
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Cluster headache
- Medication overuse headache
- Tension-type headache
- Allergic or viral rhinosinusitis
- Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri)
- Reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Allow patients with migraine headache to be in a calm, dark environment
- Oxygen may be beneficial
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Exclude secondary causes of headache
- Rapid and effective analgesia
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Detailed history will exclude secondary cause of headache in most patients
- Provide analgesia without relying upon opioid analgesics
- IV saline hydration is often helpful
- Provide patient with diagnosis – “You have a migraine”, education about trigger avoidance
Pregnancy Considerations
Metoclopramide, prochlorperazine best treatment options in pregnancy
MEDICATION
- Abortive therapy in ED:
- Dopamine antagonists:
- Prochlorperazine 10 mg IV coadministered with diphenhydramine 25 mg IV to prevent akathisia
- Droperidol 2.5 mg IV coadministered with diphenhydramine 25 mg IV to prevent akathisia (check EKG prior)
- Metoclopramide 10 mg IV
- Trimethobenzamide 200 mg IM
- Triptans:
- Sumatriptan: 6 mg SC (avoid if cardiac risk factors)
- Eletriptan 40 mg PO
- Ergot alkaloids:
- Dihydroergotamine: 1 mg IV, coadministered with an antiemetic (avoid if cardiac risk factors; avoid if on macrolide or antiretrovirals)
- Nonsteroidals
- Corticosteroids
- Dexamethasone 10 mg IV or IM
- Prednisone taper