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Topic: Don't know if it is a Cluster Headache? (Read 299 times) |
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Im_His_Wife
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Don't know if it is a Cluster Headache?
« on: Feb 19th, 2003, 11:12pm » |
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Hello This is my first time here and I am hoping for some information about my husbands headaches. I have read alot of information regarding cluster headaches but they all say the headaches last from 15 minutes to 2 hours or longer several times a day. My husband gets them several times a day but they only last anywhere from 2 to 4 seconds that's it. When this happens he stops dead in his track and can't move, his eye will sometimes water as well. Does this sound like a cluster headache even though the time they last is only seconds? Any info would be appreciated Thank you
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Frank
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Re: Don't know if it is a Cluster Headache?
« Reply #1 on: Feb 19th, 2003, 11:26pm » |
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There is a condition called Chronic Paroxysmal Hemicrania (CPH) that is similar to clusters, but the pain only lasts second or minutes. Several attacks per day is common. CPH is almost always relieved by indomethacin (Indocin). If indomethacin does not help, the diagnosis of CPH is in doubt (although it still could be CPH).... so ten it could still be clusters or something else.
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Mark C
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Re: Don't know if it is a Cluster Headache?
« Reply #2 on: Feb 20th, 2003, 12:44am » |
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A little more info..... "PAROXYSMAL HEMICRANIAS The paroxysmal hemicranias are a group of rare, benign headache disorders that clinically resemble cluster headache, fail to remit with standard anticluster therapies, and respond spectacularly to indomethacin. Chronic paroxysmal hemicrania (CPH) first was described in 1974, was named in 1976, and appears in the IHS classification. The first cases of CPH were characterized by multiple, short-lived, unilateral attacks that occurred on a daily basis for years without remission. With time, it became clear that not all patients experienced this chronic unremitting course; some patients reported a remitting pattern with discrete headache phases separated by prolonged periods of pain-free remissions. Kudrow et al named this pattern episodic paroxysmal hemicrania (EPH). Other patients have experienced an initially episodic course that over time evolved into the chronic nonrelenting phase." http://www.clusterheadaches.org/library/general/ch_general.htm Oh Yeah....WELCOME!
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« Last Edit: Feb 20th, 2003, 12:47am by Mark C » |
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thsa/simon
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Re: Don't know if it is a Cluster Headache?
« Reply #3 on: Feb 21st, 2003, 6:12pm » |
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Welcome wife, Please keep in mind that I am no expert, but I do have a little extra knowledge where headaches are concerned. See if this sounds familiar.... Title SUNCT Syndrome Source CNS Drugs. 16(6):373-83, 2002. Abstract Short-lasting Unilateral Neuralgiform headache attacks with Conjunctival injection and Tearing (SUNCT) is a syndrome predominant in males, with a mean age of onset around 50 years. The attacks are strictly unilateral, generally with the pain persistently confined to the ocular/periocular area. Most attacks are moderate to severe in intensity and burning, stabbing or electrical in character. The mean duration of paroxysms is 1 minute, with a usual range of 10 to 120 seconds (total range 5 to 250 seconds). Prominent, ipsilateral conjunctival injection and lacrimation regularly accompany the attacks. Nasal stuffiness/rhinorrhoea are frequently noted. In addition, there is subclinical forehead sweating. During attacks, there is increased intraocular pressure on the symptomatic side and swelling of the eyelids. No changes in pupil diameter have been observed. Attacks can be triggered mostly from trigeminally innervated areas, but also from the extratrigeminal territory. There are also spontaneous attacks. An irregular temporal pattern is the rule, with symptomatic periods alternating with remissions in an unpredictable fashion. During active periods, the frequency of attacks may vary from <1 attack/day to >30 attacks/hour. The attacks predominate during the daytime, nocturnal attacks being seldom reported. A SUNCT-like picture has been described in some patients with either intra-axial or extra-axial posterior fossa lesions, mostly vascular disturbances/ malformations. In the vast majority of patients, however, aetiology and pathogenesis are unknown. In SUNCT syndrome, there is a lack of persistent, convincingly beneficial effect of drugs or anaesthetic blockades that are generally effective in cluster headache, chronic paroxysmal hemicrania, trigeminal neuralgia, idiopathic stabbing headache ('jabs and jolts syndrome'), and other headaches more faintly resembling SUNCT syndrome. Single reports have claimed that carbamazepine, lamotrigine, gabapentin, corticosteroids or surgical procedures may be of help. However, caution is recommended when assessing any therapy in a disorder such as SUNCT syndrome, in which the rather chaotic and unpredictable temporal pattern makes the assessment of any drug/therapeutic effect per se a particularly difficult matter. [References: 56] simon
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