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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case is presented which has features of Cervicogenic Headache and of Hemicrania Continua. A sudden maneuver of the neck and later a greater occipital nerve block, both resulted in relief of the pain. A cervical cause is suggested.
Headache 1992 Oct
PMID:Unilateral headache with features of hemicrania continua and cervicogenic headache--a case report. 144 91

Hemicrania continua (HC) is characterized by a continuous unilateral headache of moderate severity, occurring in 2 patterns; a continuous form in which headaches persist continuously without remission for years, and a remitting form, consisting of headache phases separated by periods of pain-free remission. The remitting form of HC must be distinguished from other cyclical headache disorders such as episodic paroxysmal hemicrania and episodic cluster headache. Characteristically, the headache of HC is unilateral and without sideshift. We now report a case of HC in which headaches alternate sides.
Headache 1992 May
PMID:Hemicrania continua: attacks may alternate sides. 843 99

Hemicrania continua (HC) is a headache entity completely responsive to indomethacin. Since 1984, 18 cases have been described, 15 females and 3 males, i.e. a F:M ratio of 5.0. The finding of a female preponderance, like that in chronic paroxysmal hemicrania, is a new observation. HC is, in general, a unilateral headache in the sense that it sets in on one side and subsequently sticks to this side. In two cases, both sides might possibly be involved, when the pain was at its maximum. In another (somewhat dubious) case the headache was bilateral. The pain was continuous from the beginning in 8 of 18 cases (early stage ratio continuous: non-continuous = 0.8). Over time, the headache developed a continuous character in 16 of the 18 cases, producing a "continuous: non-continuous ratio" of 8:1. The intensity of pain generally was moderate and was not reported as excruciatingly severe by any patient. The autonomic involvement from a clinical point of view, was clearly less pronounced than that of other unilateral headaches, such as cluster headache and chronic paroxysmal hemicrania.
Headache 1991 Jan
PMID:"Hemicrania continua": a clinical review. 201 64

The case of a patient suffering from strictly unilateral continuous headache, absolutely responsive to indomethacin is reported. This is the first Hemicrania continua case to be documented in Spain. The tyramine test resulted in anisocoria with the smaller pupil on the symptomatic side. A second tyramine test after one week on 75 mg indomethacin per day failed to produce anisocoria. Treatment was reduced to 25 mg indomethacin per day, and this dose was sufficient to control the headache completely.
Cephalalgia 1990 Jun
PMID:Hemicrania continua. The first Spanish case: a case report. 224 59

Ten years of study has resulted in considerable but fragmented knowledge about regional cerebral blood flow in migraine with aura (classic migraine). In the present study, the number of repeatedly studied patients (n = 63) was large enough to determine statistically significant sequences of events and statistically significant spatial relations. The first observable event was a decrease of regional cerebral blood flow posteriorly in one cerebral hemisphere. Further development of this pathological process was accompanied by the aura symptoms. Thereafter headache occurred while regional cerebral blood flow remained decreased. During the headache phase, regional cerebral blood flow gradually changed from abnormally low to abnormally high without apparent change in headache. In some patients headache disappeared while regional cerebral blood flow remained increased. Although regional cerebral blood flow reduction and aura symptoms in the great majority of patients were unilateral, one-third had bilateral headache. Unilateral headache usually localized to the side on which regional cerebral blood flow was reduced and from which the aura symptoms originated (i.e., aura symptoms were perceived to occur contralaterally but presumably originated in the hypoperfused hemisphere). Our results suggest a simple model for migraine attacks: A pathological disturbance in one cerebral hemisphere causes the aura symptoms and after a time delay, it also causes the headache by stimulating local vascular nociceptors. Bilateral headache caused by a unilateral cerebral disturbance may be explained by recent neuroanatomical and neurophysiological findings.
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PMID:Timing and topography of cerebral blood flow, aura, and headache during migraine attacks. 228 66

For seventeen years, a young man suffered from headaches of one to three days duration occurring once every six or seven days and totally disappearing between episodes. These were strictly unilateral (always on the left side), and were absolutely responsive to indomethacin. They differ clinically from the other two indomethacin-responsive headaches described up to now: Hemicrania Continua (HC) and Chronic Paroxysmal Hemicrania (CPH). He has a sister suffering from HC. Similar to HC, but unlike CPH, topical tyramine in our patient's eyes resulted in anisocoria before, but not after, indomethacin treatment. Our case differs from HC, however, in its time pattern; it could either be a pre-chronic stage of HC or a new type of headache. It seems unlikely that a time pattern that has remained unchanged for 17 years will become continuous, as in HC, in the future, and thus it is possible that our patient represents a case of a new type of headache that we propose to name "Hemicrania Episodica." In any case, it seems probable that this type of headache, although clinically different, may share a common pathogenic basis with HC.
Headache 1990 May
PMID:"Hemicrania episodica"--a new type of headache or a pre-chronic stage of hemicrania continua? 237 Jan 34

The first case of Hemicrania continua in Greece is reported; a female of 47 years with a 17-year history of right-sided headache. For the last year, she had a moderate pain on the left side (amounting to 10-15% of the right-sided one and occurring only occasionally, i.e. when the right-sided pain was severe). After 17 years the pain still had a remitting course with pain periods of around three weeks interrupted by pain-free periods of approximately ten days. The indomethacin effect is complete.
Cephalalgia 1989 Dec
PMID:Hemicrania continua: a case report. 261 89

Chronic paroxysmal Hemicrania (CPH) is a headache syndrome first described in 1974. Since then about 60 cases have been reported in the world literature. CPH is characterised by headache attacks occurring daily and always strictly unilaterally. The frequency of the attacks varies from 5 to 30 per 24 hours, the single attack having an usual length of 2 to 30 minutes. The prompt response to indomethacin is the decisive diagnostic criterion of this headache syndrome. The clinical picture, the treatment, some aspects of the pathogenesis and the differential diagnosis of CPH are described by means of case reports. To our knowledge these are the first four cases reported in West Germany.
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PMID:[Chronic paroxysmal hemicrania. A review based on personal cases]. 648 62

The angiographic, clinical, and genetic characteristics of fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) are reviewed in 37 patients (mean age 48 years) selected from a pool of 4000 angiograms of carotid or vertebral arteries. FMD was a neglected pathogenic factor in 28 patients with hemorrhagic or ischemic cerebral lesions. The aneurysms found in 19 patients had conventional appearance and were mainly located in the internal carotid or middle cerebral arteries and on the same side as the most affected cervical artery, which suggests that aneurysms and FMD are pathogenically related. A clinical syndrome is presented where headache, ECG-abnormalities, hypertension, mental distress, tinnitus, vertigo, arrhythmia, TIA, and syncope are frequent components. Hemicrania, sometimes combined with ipsilateral Horner's Syndrome, was found in patients with advanced lesions in the carotid artery of the same side. An associated occurrence of stroke in pedigrees, especially among young and middle aged females, indicates that FMD in the majority of cases in inherited as an autosomal dominant trait with reduced penetrance in males.
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PMID:Fibromuscular dysplasia and the brain. I. Observations on angiographic, clinical and genetic characteristics. 706 80

Ten patients with cluster headache in an active period and 6 controls were studied as to heart rate, blood pressure, blood flow in the common carotid arteries (CCA), end-tidal PCO2 and pain before, during and after 6 minutes of breathing 6% CO2 in air. Heart rate increased significantly during CO2 breathing in controls but not in patients. The cluster headache patients had significantly lower baseline end-tidal PCO2 than controls. CCA blood flow increased significantly during CO2 breathing in both groups. Vascular resistance decreased during CO2 provocation and increased above baseline levels 5 minutes after provocation in both groups and related to the end-tidal PCO2. Six of eight cluster headache patients, who had an increase of blood flow at provocation, reported slight to moderate unilateral pain in relation to the CO2 provocation in contrast to controls. One patient treated with 6 mg sumatriptan 2.5 hours before the provocation had an end-tidal PCO2 within the range of the controls, and did not get an increase of CCA blood flow or pain at provocation. Six of the cluster headache patients were restudied when out of the active period. There was still no heart rate increase during CO2 breathing and end-tidal PCO2 was still lower than in the controls. Unilateral headache was not provoked.
Headache 1995 Jan
PMID:Provocation of unilateral pain in cluster headache patients by breathing CO2. 786 33


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