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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have discussed several miscellaneous headache disorders not associated with structural brain disease. The first group included those headaches provoked by "exertional" triggers in various forms. These include benign cough headache, BEH, and headache associated with sexual activity. The IHS diagnostic criteria were discussed. Benign exertional headache and cough headache were discussed together because of their substantial similarities. In general, BEH is characterized by severe, short-lived
pain
after coughing, sneezing, lifting a burden, sexual activity, or other similar brief effort. Structural disease of the brain or skull was the most important differential diagnosis for these disorders, with posterior fossa mass lesions being identified as the most common organic etiology. Magnetic resonance imaging with special attention to the posterior fossa and foramen magnum is the preferred method for evaluating these patients. Indomethacin is the treatment of choice. The headache associated with sexual activity is dull in the early phases of sexual excitement and becomes intense at orgasm. This headache is unpredictable in occurrence. Like BEH, the headache associated with sexual activity can be a manifestation of structural disease. Subarachnoid hemorrhage must be excluded, by CT scanning and CSF examination, in patients with the sexual headache. Benign headache associated with sexual activity has been successfully treated with indomethacin and beta-blockers. The second miscellaneous group of headache disorders includes those provoked by eating something cold or food additives, and by environmental stimuli.
Idiopathic stabbing headache
does not have a known trigger and appears frequently in migraineurs. Its occurrence may also herald the termination of an attack of cluster headache. Indomethacin treatment provides significant relief. Three headaches triggered by substances that are eaten were reviewed: ingestion of a cold stimulus, nitrate/nitrite-induced headache, and MSG-induced headache. For the most part, avoidance of these stimuli can prevent the associated headache. Lastly, we reviewed headache provoked by high altitude and hypoxia. The headache is part of the syndrome of AMS during its early or benign stage and the later malignant stage of HACE. The
pain
can be exacerbated by exercise. The best treatment is prevention via slow ascent and avoidance of respiratory depressants. Acetazolamide and dexamethasone have proved useful in preventing this syndrome.
...
PMID:Cough, exertional, and other miscellaneous headaches. 202 Feb 26
Idiopathic stabbing headache
is described as a primary, benign headache seen mainly in women. It is characterized by ultra-brief attacks of
pain
lasting one second or less and having either single or multiple foci. The orbital region is by far the most frequently affected. Hardly any triggering factors or accompanying symptoms have been identified. The frequency of paroxysms is highly variable, ranging from one attack per year to more than 50 per day. Under extreme circumstances, stabbing pains can come as often as one attack per minute. The timing is erratic, with paroxysms that can be either sporadic or grouped within symptomatic periods, but rarely is the clinical course persistently chronic. Treatment with indomethacin usually provides considerable relief.
Idiopathic stabbing headache
may exist per se, with its own category, but often occurs alongside other primary headaches. In such cases the two types of
pain
may coincide or not.
...
PMID:[Idiopathic pulsating headache]. 949 58
Idiopathic stabbing headache
is a quite unknown disorder. Its main features consist of brief stabbing pains, lasting few seconds. In most cases, idiopathic stabbing headache is underdiagnosed. We have followed up migraine patients during a period of 12 months, aiming to determine the prevalence and main features of idiopathic stabbing headache while occurring apart from migraine attacks. Two hundred and thirty-three of the 280 patients initially surveyed were included in the analysis of the results. Ninety-four patients presented idiopathic stabbing headaches (40.4%), being 72 of them females (76.5%). For migraine with idiopathic stabbing headaches, mean age, age of beginning of migraine and years with migraine were 33, 22.5 and 10.6 years, respectively. Mean duration of the idiopathic stabbing headaches was reported to be 1.42 seconds [ 1 second by 68 patients (72.4%), 2 seconds by 17 (18.1%), 3 seconds by 6 (6.3%), 4 seconds by 1 (1.05%) and 5 seconds by 2 (2.15%)].
Pain
paroxysms were reported to be unilateral by 86 (91.4%) and bilateral by 8 (8.6%) of the cases. They were reported to be temporal by 56 patients (60%), occipital by 15 (15.6%), frontal by 8 (8.5%), temporo-occipital by 7 (7.4%), parietal by 5 (5.3%), fronto-temporal by 1 (1.06%), cervical by 1 (1.06%) and ocular by 1 patient (1.06%). The study confirms a high prevalence of idiopathic stabbing headaches in migraineurs. Its main clinical features could be well determined during the interval between migraine attacks.
...
PMID:[Prevalence and semiologic aspects of the idiopathic stabbing headache in a migraine population]. 1140 25
Idiopathic stabbing headache
(
ISH
) and ice cream headache occur due to paroxysmal firing of trigeminal pathways and a defect in
pain
control mechanisms. Any defect in
pain
control mechanisms appears to be localized to the affected areas. Therefore, we compared
ISH
and experimentally induced ice cream headache localizations in the same group of migraine sufferers to investigate similarities and differences between these headaches. The percentage of ice cream headache localizations restricted to 'in front of the vertex/on the vertex' was 94%, while it was 45% for
ISH
. The percentage of ice cream headache occurrence behind the vertex was 6% and 55% for
ISH
. Due to the widespread distribution of
ISH
in the head, there might be irritation of various branches of the trigeminal nerve, while the restricted localizations of ice cream headache suggest irritation of a certain branch or branches of the trigeminal nerve, e.g. in the oropharynx. Either widespread or restricted irritation of trigeminal pathways causes either
ISH
or ice cream headache, in which intermittent deficits in central
pain
control mechanisms seem to be playing the key role.
...
PMID:Idiopathic stabbing headache and experimental ice cream headache (short-lived headaches). 1463 Nov 22
Idiopathic stabbing headache
is a primary headache defined as "transient stabs of
pain
in the head that occur spontaneously in the absence of underlying organic disease." Although its variant form, stabbing
pain
with extracephalic distribution, has been reported in rare adult cases, pediatric presentation is extremely rare. We report an 8-year-old boy suffering from severe stabbing
pain
in the left side of the chest, right side of the abdomen, and right knee lasting 2 to 3 minutes with increasing frequency. He was completely normal between attacks. The attack was not accompanied with headache initially. Investigation showed no abnormality. A diagnosis of extracephalic stabbing
pain
was made. The patient's symptoms were ameliorated by administration of valproic acid. This report illustrates that extracephalic stabbing
pain
can occur in pediatric patients. It is important to be aware of this peculiar condition because the
pain
is so severe, and it can be treatable with medication.
...
PMID:Pediatric-onset extracephalic stabbing pain. 2409 97
Idiopathic stabbing headache
(
ISH
) is a primary headache syndrome characterized by transient, sharp, stabbing pains located in the first division of the trigeminal nerve. Reports of pediatric
ISH
are rare, and extracephalic
pain
in pediatric
ISH
is extremely rare. Here we report the case of a 7-year-old male patient suffering from frequent, short, stabbing headache, which was occasionally associated with abdominal and lower back pain. Various investigations were normal. He was diagnosed with
ISH
, and valproic acid was administered to relieve his headache and accompanying symptoms. Our case demonstrates that abdominal and lower back pain may occur in pediatric
ISH
. This case may provide new evidence linking
ISH
and migraine by showing that extracephalic symptoms accompanying
ISH
are similar to those of migraine. We hypothesize that the mechanism underlying the headache and abdominal and lower back pain associated with
ISH
may be similar to that of a migraine headache. Accumulating additional cases by asking specific questions regarding the presence of the unusual symptoms presented in our case may help to establish a detailed clinical profile of these unfamiliar and peculiar symptoms in the pediatric
ISH
population.
...
PMID:Abdominal and lower back pain in pediatric idiopathic stabbing headache. 2429 7