Evaluation of Headache in Adults
Evaluation of Headache in Adults
Evaluation of Headache in Adults
Authors:
R Joshua Wootton, MDiv, PhD
Franz J Wippold II, MD, FACR
Mark A Whealy, MD
Section Editor:
Jerry W Swanson, MD, MHPE
Deputy Editor:
Richard P Goddeau, Jr, DO, FAHA
Contributor Disclosures
All topics are updated as new evidence becomes available and our peer review process is complete.
Literature review current through: Jul 2020. | This topic last updated: Apr 06, 2020.
The clinical features and diagnosis of specific primary headache syndromes are
discussed separately:
●Migraine:
Pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, and diagnosis of migraine in adults
Chronic migraine
Vestibular migraine
Hemiplegic migraine
Migraine with brainstem aura (basilar-type migraine)
●Tension-type headache:
Tension-type headache in adults: Pathophysiology, clinical features, and
diagnosis
●Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias:
Cluster headache typically leads to significant disability and most of these patients
will come to medical attention. However, cluster headache remains an uncommon
diagnosis in primary care settings because of overall low prevalence in the general
population (<1 percent).
Clinicians can easily become familiar with the most common primary headache
disorders and how to distinguish them, as summarized in the table (table 1).
Migraine trigger factors (table 3) may include stress, menstruation, visual stimuli,
weather changes, nitrates, fasting, wine, sleep disturbances, and aspartame,
among others. (See "Pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, and diagnosis of
migraine in adults", section on 'Precipitating and exacerbating factors'.)
The examination of an adult with headache complaints should cover the following
areas:
The neurologic examination should cover mental status testing, cranial nerve
examination, funduscopy and otoscopy, and symmetry on motor, reflex, cerebellar
(coordination), and sensory tests. Gait examination should include getting up from
a seated position without any support and walking on tiptoes and heels, tandem
gait, and Romberg test.
During the last three months, did you have the following with your headaches?
●Photophobia – Did light bother you (a lot more than when you do not have
headaches)?
●Incapacity – Did your headaches limit your ability to work, study, or do what
you needed to do for at least one day?
●Nausea – Did you feel nauseated or sick to your stomach?
The mnemonic PIN is a reminder of the questions used in the ID Migraine screen
that can help identify migraine. The ID Migraine screen is positive if the patient
answers "yes" to two of the three items. In a systematic review of 13 studies that
involved over 5800 patients, the pooled sensitivity and specificity of ID Migraine
was 0.84 and 0.76, respectively [11]. A positive ID Migraine increased the pretest
probability of migraine from 59 to 84 percent, whereas a negative ID Migraine
score reduced the probability of migraine from 59 to 23 percent.
Another simple and validated instrument, the brief headache screen, consists of
three to six questions [12]. One version includes the following four questions:
●How often do you get severe headaches (ie, without treatment it is difficult to
function)?
●How often do you get other (milder) headaches?
●How often do you take headache relievers or pain pills?
●Has there been any recent change in your headaches?
Among the questions above, the second on frequency of headache and the third
on the need for pain pills may be helpful for identifying patients with medication
overuse (eg, patients who use symptomatic medications more than three days per
week and/or who have daily headaches). The last question about recent changes
in the headache is particularly helpful for identifying patients who may have an
important secondary cause of headache; a patient with a stable pattern of
headache for six months is unlikely to have a serious underlying cause.
The mnemonic SNNOOP10 is a reminder of the danger signs ("red flags") for the
presence of serious underlying disorders that can cause acute or subacute
headache [16]:
Any of these findings should prompt further investigation, including brain imaging
with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or computed tomography (CT).
●Strictly unilateral pain that does not switch sides (ie, side-locked pain) is
associated with an increased likelihood of secondary headache disorders
(especially cervicogenic headache and post-traumatic headache), although
only a minority may be related to a serious underlying disease (eg, intracranial
neoplasm, cervical arterial dissection, giant cell arteritis, cerebral venous sinus
thrombosis) [17]. Thus, further evaluation should be pursued in patients
presenting with side-locked headache.
●Impaired vision or seeing halos around light suggests the presence of
glaucoma. Suspicion for subacute angle closure glaucoma should be raised by
relatively short duration (often less than one hour) unilateral headaches that
do not meet criteria for migraine arising after age 50 [18]. Acute myopia and
secondary angle closure glaucoma are rare adverse effects
of topiramate (often used to treat migraine), typically within one month of
starting treatment.
●Visual field defects suggest the presence of a lesion of the optic pathway (eg,
due to a pituitary mass).
●Sudden, severe, unilateral vision loss suggests the presence of optic neuritis.
Optic neuritis typically presents with painful, monocular visual loss that evolves
over several hours to a few days. One-third of patients have visible optic nerve
inflammation (papillitis) on funduscopic examination. (See "Optic neuritis:
Pathophysiology, clinical features, and diagnosis".)
●Blurring of vision on forward bending of the head, headaches upon waking
early in the morning that improve with sitting up, and double vision or loss of
coordination and balance should raise the suspicion of raised intracranial
pressure (ICP); this should also be considered in patients with chronic, daily,
progressively worsening headaches associated with chronic nausea.
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri) typically affects
obese women of childbearing age. Characteristic features are headache,
papilledema, vision loss or diplopia, elevated lumbar puncture (LP) opening
pressure with normal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) composition. (See "Evaluation
and management of elevated intracranial pressure in adults" and "Idiopathic
intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri): Clinical features and
diagnosis".)
●In patients who present with headache that is relieved with recumbency and
exacerbated with upright posture, the diagnosis of headache attributed to
spontaneous intracranial hypotension, or to spontaneous spinal cerebrospinal
fluid (CSF) leak with normal CSF pressure [19], should be considered. An
additional major feature of this headache syndrome is diffuse, pachymeningeal
enhancement on brain MRI. The accepted etiology is CSF leakage, which may
occur in the context of disruption of the meninges. (See "Spontaneous
intracranial hypotension: Pathophysiology, clinical features, and diagnosis".)
●The presence of nausea, vomiting, worsening of headache with changes in
body position (particularly bending over), a focal neurologic deficit,
papilledema, new-onset seizure, and/or a significant change in prior headache
pattern suggests a brain tumor as a possible cause. The features of brain
tumor headache are generally nonspecific and vary widely with tumor location,
size, and rate of growth. Brain tumor headache may resemble tension-type
headache, migraine, or a variety of other headache types. (See "Brain tumor
headache" and "Overview of the clinical features and diagnosis of brain
tumors in adults".)
●Intermittent headache with generalized sweating, tachycardia, and/or
sustained or paroxysmal hypertension is suggestive of pheochromocytoma.
(See "Clinical presentation and diagnosis of pheochromocytoma".)
●Morning headache is nonspecific and can occur as part of a primary
headache syndrome or may be secondary to a number of disorders including
sleep apnea, sleep-related bruxism, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,
caffeine withdrawal, medication overuse headache, and the obesity-
hypoventilation syndrome. (See "Clinical presentation and diagnosis of
obstructive sleep apnea in adults" and "Chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease: Definition, clinical manifestations, diagnosis, and
staging" and "Clinical manifestations and diagnosis of obesity hypoventilation
syndrome".)
Imaging — CT or MRI are the common modalities used to diagnose many causes
of secondary headache. Choice of exact body part (eg, head, neck, face) and use
of contrast varies with clinical scenario.
Indications for imaging — Patients with the danger signs or other features
suggesting a secondary headache source will require imaging. (See 'Danger
signs' above and 'Specific features suggesting a secondary headache
source' above.)
Imaging is usually not warranted for patients with a stable migraine pattern and a
normal neurologic examination, although a lower threshold for imaging is
reasonable for patients with atypical migraine features or in patients who do not
fulfill the strict definition of migraine [22]. As an example, imaging is indicated for
patients presenting with recent-onset headache that is featureless (ie, bilateral,
non-throbbing, without nausea and without sensitivity to light, sound, or smell)
[23,24]. However, imaging for no other reason than reassurance is sometimes
performed in clinical practice. It is important that the clinician provide the patient
with a clear explanation of both the diagnosis and the reason for imaging,
especially if it is being performed in someone suspected of having primary
headache [23]. The patient should also be informed that incidental findings (eg,
vascular lesion, small neoplasm) likely unrelated to the headache can be seen in 1
to 2 percent of MRI exams and that there are few data providing guidance as to
how they should be managed [25,26]. In a population-based imaging study of 864
adults, major intracranial abnormalities were not more likely among subjects with
headache compared with headache-free individuals [27].
The vast majority of patients without danger signs do not have a secondary cause
of headache [28,29]. As an example, in a study of 373 patients with chronic
headache at a tertiary referral center, all had one or more of the following
characteristics that prompted referral for head CT scan: increased severity of
symptoms or resistance to appropriate drug therapy, change in characteristics or
pattern of headache, or family history of an intracranial structural lesion [30]. Only
two exams (less than 1 percent) showed potentially significant lesions (one low-
grade glioma and one aneurysm); only the aneurysm was treated.
Choice of imaging exam — The choice of imaging modality and need for
intravenous (IV) contrast depends upon the clinical setting and indications [31].
The ACR Appropriateness Criteria provides general guidance for many common
clinical scenarios of headache [34]. When the decision is not obvious, consultation
with the radiologist is helpful to facilitate patient referral. For imaging of the vessels,
cerebral and cervical angiography using computed tomography (CTA) or magnetic
resonance angiography (MRA) is performed as an added exam to MRI (or CT) and
usually requires IV contrast administration. MRA and CTA image the arteries,
veins, or both, depending on the indication. Exams tailored for imaging the orbits
and ear (encompassing the skull base and pituitary), face, and maxilla
(encompassing the paranasal sinuses), or the temporomandibular joint are
sometimes added to the head imaging if an underlying diagnosis that localizes
anatomically is suspected. The approximate effective radiation dose for a head CT
is 2 millisievert (mSv).
New or recent onset headache — The absence of similar headaches in the past,
when combined with high-risk features, suggests a possible serious disorder. Head
MRI without and with contrast should be obtained to evaluate for an intracranial
mass lesion (eg, primary or metastatic neoplasm, abscess, hematoma),
communicating or obstructive hydrocephalus, or cerebral edema from ischemia or
infarction (ie, stroke). If MRI is not available or contraindicated, head CT without
and with contrast should be performed instead.
In the absence of danger signs, patients who present with a new or recent onset
headache and a normal neurologic examination are most likely to have primary
headache, such as migraine or TTH (table 1).
Older patients — Older patients are at increased risk for secondary types of
headache (eg, giant cell arteritis, trigeminal neuralgia, subdural hematoma, acute
herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia, and brain tumors) and some types of
primary headache (eg, hypnic headache, cough headache, and migraine
accompaniments) [35]. Need for imaging depends on the suspected diagnosis.
Diagnostic consideration include:
Pain related purely to sinus conditions may have some features that aid in
distinguishing it from migraine [40,41]. Sinus-related pain or headache is typically
described as a pressure-like or dull sensation that is usually bilateral and
periorbital. However, it can be unilateral with deviated septum, middle or inferior
turbinate hypertrophy, or unilateral sinus disease. In addition, sinus-related pain is
typically associated with nasal obstruction or congestion, lasts for days at a time,
and is usually not associated with nausea, vomiting, photophobia, or phonophobia.
(See "Acute sinusitis and rhinosinusitis in adults: Clinical manifestations and
diagnosis".)
The severity, extent, and location of sinus-related pain do not correlate with the
extent or location of mucosal disease as revealed by imaging [41].
In adults with chronic recurrent headaches, including those with migraine aura, with
no recent change in headache pattern, no history of seizures, and no other focal
neurologic signs or symptoms, the routine use of imaging is not warranted. The
yield of head CT or MRI in identifying potentially treatable lesions is <1 percent
[44]. However, imaging to exclude a secondary cause of headache is indicated in
the initial evaluation of patients presenting with hemicrania continua, new daily
persistent headache, cluster headache, paroxysmal hemicrania, short-lasting
unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks, and hypnic headache, described below.
With headache subtypes of long duration (ie, four hours or more), "chronic"
indicates a headache frequency of 15 or more days a month for longer than three
months in the absence of organic pathology. These headache subtypes are:
With headache subtypes of shorter duration (ie, less than four hours), "chronic"
refers to a prolonged duration of the condition itself without remission. The
headache subtypes in this category are the following:
sponsored guidelines from selected countries and regions around the world are
provided separately. (See "Society guideline links: Migraine and other primary
headache disorders".)
patient education materials, "The Basics" and "Beyond the Basics." The Basics
patient education pieces are written in plain language, at the 5th to 6th grade reading
level, and they answer the four or five key questions a patient might have about a
given condition. These articles are best for patients who want a general overview
and who prefer short, easy-to-read materials. Beyond the Basics patient education
pieces are longer, more sophisticated, and more detailed. These articles are
written at the 10th to 12th grade reading level and are best for patients who want in-
depth information and are comfortable with some medical jargon.
Here are the patient education articles that are relevant to this topic. We encourage
you to print or e-mail these topics to your patients. (You can also locate patient
education articles on a variety of subjects by searching on "patient info" and the
keyword(s) of interest.)