Zusammenfassung
Headaches are common in children, increasing in incidence from early childhood to adolescence. They account for 0.7% to 1.3% of all paediatric emergency department visits. [1] [2] Headaches may be classified as primary or secondary. [3] Primary headaches include migraine, tension-type, and cluster headaches. Secondary headaches are symptomatic of an underlying intracranial or medical condition that requires treatment. The initial assessment of acute headache aims to determine whether there is a secondary cause for headache that requires urgent intervention.
Clinical classification
Headache may be classified in terms of time course.
Acute headache
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A single episode of headache pain without prior headaches.
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May represent the first or an unusually severe form of primary headache.
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May suggest a new acute secondary cause for headache that, therefore, requires evaluation.
Acute recurrent headache
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Stereotyped headaches separated by headache-free periods.
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Most suggestive of a primary headache disorder, especially if the pattern has persisted for a long period.
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May also occur in secondary headache, as with intermittent elevation in intracranial pressure.
Chronic progressive headache
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A gradual increase in headache.
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Suggestive of an expanding intracranial lesion.
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Of children with brain tumours, 62% have headache prior to diagnosis, and 98% have at least one neurological symptom or abnormality on examination. [4]
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The most common symptoms include nausea or vomiting, difficulty walking, visual symptoms, focal weakness, or personality change. [4]
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The most common signs include papilloedema, abnormal eye movements, ataxia, abnormal reflexes, and visual field or acuity defects. [4]
Chronic non-progressive headache
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Constant steady headache.
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May be due to a chronic type of primary headache or similar secondary aetiologies.
Migraine diagnostic criteria
Diagnosis of migraine without aura requires: [3] [5]
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A: At least 5 attacks fulfilling criteria B-D
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B: Headache attacks lasting 1 to 72 hours
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C: Headache having at least 2 of the following characteristics:
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Unilateral location, may be bilateral, frontotemporal (not occipital)
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Pulsing quality
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Moderate or severe pain intensity
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Aggravation by or causing avoidance of routine physical activity (e.g., walking, climbing stairs)
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D: During the headache, at least one of the following:
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Nausea or vomiting
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Photophobia and phonophobia, which may be inferred from behaviour
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E: Not attributable to another disorder.
Diagnosis of migraine with aura requires:
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A: At least 2 attacks fulfilling the criteria B-D
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B: Aura consisting of at least 1 of the following, but no motor weakness:
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Fully reversible visual symptoms (flickering lights, spots, or lines)
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Fully reversible sensory symptoms, including positive features (pins and needles) or negative features (numbness)
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Fully reversible dysphasic speech disturbances
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C: At least 2 of the following:
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Homonymous visual symptoms or unilateral sensory symptoms
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At least 1 aura symptom developing gradually over >5 minutes or different aura symptoms occurring in succession over >5 minutes
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Each symptom lasting >5 minutes and <60 minutes
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D: Not attributable to another disorder.
Differentialdiagnose
- Common
- Uncommon
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- Subarachnoid haemorrhage
- Stroke, ischaemic
- Parenchymal haemorrhage
- Vascular dissection (carotid, vertebral, or intracranial arteries)
- Sinovenous thrombosis, cerebral
- Postconcussion headache
- Cerebral contusion
- Subdural haemorrhage
- Intracranial hypotension
- Epidural haemorrhage
- Meningitis
- Encephalitis
- Dental caries, gingival disease, or abscess
- Brain tumour
- Temporomandibular joint syndrome
- Tension headache
- Indometacin-responsive headache
- Medication-overuse headache
- Cluster headache
- New daily persistent headache
- Intermittent hydrocephalus
- Pseudotumour cerebri (idiopathic intracranial hypertension)
- Ventriculoperitoneal shunt dysfunction
- Pituitary apoplexy
- Hypertensive encephalopathy
- Occipital neuralgia
- Facial neuralgia
