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This comprehensive guide covers diagnosis and management strategies for various types of headaches, including chronic daily headaches, migraines, and tension headaches. Learn about identifying triggers, preventive measures, and treatment options for acute and chronic cases. Discover advice for different age groups, from very young children to teenagers, and receive valuable recommendations on lifestyle modifications and medication choices. Get insights into common pitfalls, diagnostic procedures, and case studies to enhance your understanding of headache management.
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HeadachesPractical approach Dr Maltby
Chronic Headache • Migraine • Tension headaches/chronic daily headaches • Teeth/Nocturnal grinding • Sinus congestion • Visual • Sleep apnoea • Benign Occipital Epilepsy • BIH • Raised intracranial pressure
When to scan • Very young children • Change in the character of headaches • History suggestive of raised ICP • Focal neurological Signs • Papillodema – not optic detrusum • Headache with erratic vomiting • FH or anxiety of IC lesion • BIH with optic nerve views
Mausley Study • Very old study 1998 • Looked at children with CNS tumours mode of referral and the symptoms • Majority DID NOT have symptoms classically of raised ICP • Majority DID NOT have focal neurology • Majority had frequently been seen by GP paediatricians and even a paediatric neurologist
Conclusions • Falsely reassured by normal examination • Signs of ICP are great but don’t help • Change in character in under 5 • School failure in over 5
Migraine • Episodes headaches relief with sleep • Vomiting • Visual disturbance- specific • Pallor • FH • Motion sickness • Neurological symptoms vary • Between times pain free
Management • Examination normal • Scan if under 5 • Advice about treating the acute attack • Isolating triggers avoidance if possible • Multiple
Triggers • Dietary – dairy, citrus, tomatoes, blackcurrant, fizzy drinks – J2O • Sleep – excessive weekend lyins or sleep overs • Excitement • Stressed out • Busy life
Busy lives • After school clubs • Sibs after school clubs • Weekend activity • Sleep overs • Home work – plans/supervision • Friendships • Sport activities • Rushing mothers
Management of acute attack • Immediate analgesia- emergency protocol • Write to the school for their support • Ibrufen, Migraleve • If vomiting Migraleve • Very rare to need Sumitryptin • Monitor school attendance maybe late attendance better than none
Preventive management • Depend on the frequency school attendance • Diet exclusion • Recognise triggers • Pziotifen • Others treatments- Topiramate, Epilum,Gabapentin, Amitriptyline
Chronic daily headache • Teenagers • High achievers • Driven from within not by school/parents • Lots of mates- squabble or miss no mates • Area of stress in family home • Not helped by analgesia • Never wake with headache but have it at night • Most difficult to manage
ManagementGeneral advice • Fluid intake • Regular meals- diet restrictions • Regular exercise • Regular sleep patterns – lying in! • TV and computer usage • Analgesia usage • Normalising life • After school clubs and in sibs • Avoid asking” do you have a headache” • Family attitude to illness
Explanation • Stressy teenagers learn to relax- pilartes • Advice about studying • Driven from within • Learn to live with it
Treatment strategies • Dietary exclusion – formally not by diary • Diary – shocking what they eat • Exclude for 6 weeks: • Diary products • Citrus/Apples in any form • Tomatoes and ketchup • Fizzy drinks • Blackcurrant drinks • Chocolate • Marmite • Anything else you can think of especially if the love them • Replace one thing every 4 days if there was a response
Medication • Diet fails or the child cheats or refuses • Explanation of pain modification the pain is there but the response is different • Trail of Pziotfen ONLY at night – for at least 6 weeks • Topiramate • Gabapentin • Epilum
Alternative treatements • Butterbur • Migraine support group • Headache clinics • CAMS
BIH • DO not diagnosis this unless confirmed papillodeama and optic nerve swelling on MRI • Reproducible reduction in visual acuity • Formal visual fields assessment is poor even in teenager • Child has a risk factor – obesity and tetracycline usage
Diagnosis • Raised pressure on opening at LP • Not under GA straightened legs • Pressure above 20 • Therapeutic and diagnostic procedure so reduce pressure to 20 if over 40 then halve it • Dramatic response to LP in terms of treatment
Pitfalls • Repeated LP • Refusal to allow it without a GA • Symptoms from LP confuse the picture • Side effects from the Diamox • Evidence that evolves residual chronic daily headache • Bolt monitoring
Noah • 18 months • Three episodes when his mother says he is found on the floor unresponsive floor and jerks lasts about 30mins but father thinks less. • Preceded by a cry • After he appears confused and inconsolable • EEG performed by the SHO after being seen in A/E- normal • ECG normal QTc 0.42sec • 24hr ECG normal • FH father used to do this as a child and was treated with Phenytoin • Comes to discuss if they should give a trail of anticonvulsant
Ellie • 12 years of age • C/O fit at school • Fat lasting 5 minutes witness by the first aider (whose sister used to have fits) • Called 999 by the maths teacher was sick and confused afterwards • In A/E now feeling better fully conscious a slight headache • B?S by paramedics 6.5 • PMH febrile convulsion resulting in an PICU admission for 24 hours given rectal diazepam that mother still carries • FH Mother has epilepsy on Tegretol • Exam normal • No focal signs to find • One café au lait spot • Referred to you asking if they could attend first fit clinic and an EEG has been organised
Part two - clinic • Further episode occurred during home tec and at home witness by her older sister • School refuse to have her back unless “some things is done” • Mother is sleeping in her bedroom on the floor • EEG –non specfic changes has occasional spikes
MAX • 4 years of age- 8 daily episodes cries sits down goes rigid eyes roll back lasting 2mins then confused afterwards for a bout 30mins. • Described as pale • Max says he feels dizzy before hand. • Neurodevelopmental normal • No other reported problems – absence episodes reported by the nursery but not noted at home • PMH – sinus bradycardia as neonate seen by Cardiologist at GOS happy with him • Examination normal HR 70 nil else • Echo normal • ECG normal • Normal QTc -0.44sec • 24hour tape mum went to anyway not cancelled
Differential diagnosis of a seizure • Syncope- Vasovagal • Cardiac causes- cardiomyopathy/prolonged QTc • Breath holding • Reflex anoxic seizures/ Reflex anoxic syncope • Psuedo sezuires • Emotional syncope • Valsalva/ constipation • Stereotypical behaviours • Tics • Gratification habits • Basilar migraine • Paroxysmal spasmodic torticollis • Benign paroxysmal vertigo
TAKE A HISTORY THE EVENT AND THE RUN UP AND AFTER. • If your not sure adopt watchful waiting DO NOT order an EEG unless you think it will give you information and interoperated the information with the clinical case • Give advice
What are the risk for a reoccurrence after one seizure? After two seizures? • What should you tell them to do at school? • Whats the advice regarding swimming? • Whats the advice about sleeping arrangements? • Whats to do about TV and computer games? • Any other advice? • You reg wants to give them Midazolam prescribe it?
Is the episode a seizures? • What’s the cause of the seizure? • Is this epilepsy? • What is the cause of the epilepsy? ---------- NOW think EEG • Classify epilepsy into a syndrome?
Epilepsy advice and information • What is epilepsy? • Caring for a baby or young child when you have epilepsy: a detailed guide • Children • Depression and epilepsy • Developing epilepsy in later life • Disability Discrimination Act (UK) • Driving and epilepsy • Education • Entitlements and benefits for people with epilepsy • Epilepsy and learning disabilities • Epilepsy and Travel abroad • Epilepsy information for prisons • Epilepsy, osteoporosis and osteomalacia • Flu and epilepsy • Getting a diagnosis • Identity jewellery • Inheritance • Living with dificult to control epilepsy • Me and my dad