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Headache
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				Contents
Background
- Headache accounts for ~2.2% of all ED visits[1]
 - The majority of these have a benign cause, but serious causes can be devastating, and a thorough H&P with an eye toward "red flag" symptoms is important in ED evaluation.
 
Headache Red Flags
Features
- Sudden onset or accelerating pattern
 - No similar headache in past
 - Age >50 yr or <5 yr
 - Occipitonuchal HA
 - Visual disturbances
 - Exertional or postcoital
 - Family history of SAH or cerebral aneurysm
 - Focal neurologic signs
 - Diastolic BP >120
 - Papilledema
 - Jaw claudication
 
Clinical Context
Headache in setting of:
- Infection
 - Cancer
 - Immunosuppression
 - Syncope
 - Trauma
 - Altered mental status
 - Systemic illness (fever, stiff neck, rash)
 - Nausea/vomiting
 - Patient on anticoagulation, steroids, NSAIDs
 
Clinical Features
History
- Time to maximal onset
 - Location
- Occipital - Cerebellar lesion, muscle spasm, cervical radiculopathy
 - Orbital - Optic neuritis, cavernous sinus thrombosis
 - Facial - Sinusitis, carotid artery dissection
 
 - Prior headache history
 
Physical Exam
- Scalp and temporal artery palpation
 - Sinus tap / transillumination
 - EBQ: Jolt Test
 - Neuro exam
 
Jolt Test
- Horizontal rotation of the head at frequency of 2 rotations/second - exacerbation of pre-existing headache is positive test.
 - Although a 1991 study[2] showed high sensitivity with this test, multiple newer studies have cast doubt on its sensitivity[3][4]. Although it may be clinically useful in the right subset of patients, it should not be considered to be 100% Sn
 
Differential Diagnosis
Headache
Common
Killers
- Meningitis/encephalitis
 - Retropharyngeal abscess
 -  Intracranial Hemorrhage (ICH)
- SAH / sentinel bleed
 
 - Acute obstructive hydrocephalus
 - Space occupying lesions
 - CVA
 - Carbon monoxide poisoning
 - Basilar artery dissection
 - Preeclampsia
 - Cerebral venous thrombosis
 - Hypertensive emergency
 - Depression
 
Maimers
- Temporal arteritis
 - Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (aka Pseudotumor Cerebri)
 - Acute Glaucoma
 - Acute sinusitis
 - Cavernous sinus thrombosis or cerebral sinus thrombosis
 
Others
- Trigeminal neuralgia
 - TMJ pain
 - Post-lumbar puncture headache
 - Dehydration
 - Analgesia abuse
 - Various ocular and dental problems
 - Herpes zoster ophthalmicus
 - Herpes zoster oticus
 - Cryptococcosis
 - Febrile headache (e.g. pyelonephritis, nonspecific viral infection)
 - Ophthalmoplegic migraine
 - Superior Vena Cava Syndrome
 
Aseptic Meningitis
- Viral
- Varicella
 - Herpes
 - Enterovirus
 - West Nile
 
 - Tuberculosis
 - Lyme disease
 - Syphilis
 - Drug induced aseptic meningitis
 - Fungal (AIDS, transplant, chemotherapy, chronic steroid use)
 - Noninfectious
- Sarcoidosis
 - Vasculitis
 - Connective tissues disease
 
 
Evaluation
Laboratory Tests
- If suspect temporal arteritis → ESR
 - If suspect meningitis → CSF studies
- Cannot use CBC to rule-out meningitis
 - Add India Ink, cryptococcal antigen if suspect AIDS-related infection
 
 - If suspect CO poisoning → carboxyhemoglobin level
 - If concern for ICH → non-contrast CT Brain ± Lumbar puncture
 
Imaging
- Consider non-contrast head CT in patients with:
- Thunderclap headache
 - Worst headache of life
 - Different headache from usual
 - Meningeal signs
 - Headache + intractable vomiting
 - New-onset headache in patients with:
- Age > 50yrs
 - Malignancy
 - HIV
 - Neurological deficits (other than migraine with aura)
 
 
 - Consider CXR
- 50% of patients with pneumococcal meningitis have evidence of pneumonia on CXR
 
 
Management
Non-specific Headache
Treat specific headache type, if known
-  1st line: prochlorperazine (compazine) 10 mg IV (+/- diphenhydramine 25-50 mg IV) + 1 L normal saline IV bolus
- Place prochlorperazine in IV bag to reduce chances of side effects from rapid administration
 - Alternative metoclopramide 10 mg IV[5] (diphenhydramine addition shows no clinical benifit[6])
 
 - Acetaminophen IV or PO, 325-1000 mg
 -  Ketorolac 30 mg IV
- Lower doses are shown to be just as effective[7]
 
 - Consider dexamethasone 10 mg IV single dose to prevent recurrence 48-72 hrs post-ED discharge, if history of recurrent headaches[8]
 - Avoid opioid medications if possible
 
Other 2nd and 3rd Line Medications
- Magnesium 1 g IV over 30-60 minutes, low side effect profile, in treatment of acute migraine attacks[9]
 - Valproate sodium 500-1000 mg IV in 50 mL of NS over 20 minutes (alternatively 10 mg/kg IV, pediatrics, max 500 mg)[10]
 - Droperidol IV/IM 1.25-2.75 mg, plus or minus diphenhydramine for extrapyramidal symptoms[11]
- Perform EKG monitoring for patients at risk of QTc prolongation
 - Do not give to patients who take already multiple QT prolonging drugs
 
 - Consider haloperidol IV 5 mg in IVF bolus with diphenhydramine to prevent need for rescue medications[12]
 - Consider 5-10 mg PO olanzapine (Zyprexa, Zydis) for prochlorperazine allergy[13][14]
- While less extrapyramidal symptoms than typical antipsychotics, beware QT prolongation
 - Particularly useful in psych patients with mania, BPD, psychosis
 - IV olanzapine may be as safe or safer than IM, with faster onset[15]
 
 - Ketamine IM/IV at subdissociative dosages, with risk stratification for potential ICP increase, though now widely considered a myth[16]
 - Cervical spine injection with IM injection of 1.5 mL of 0.5% bupivacaine (plus or minus methylprednisolone acetate) bilaterally to the sixth or seventh spinous process[17]
 - Severe, intractable status migrainosus may benefit from off-label IV propofol[18][19][20]
- Requires procedural sedation monitoring and possible IV fluid resuscitation, respiratory decompensation intervention
 - Propofol 0.5 mg/kg bolus, then 0.25 mg/kg every 10 minutes for 1 hour
 - Less aggressive regimens include propofol 10 mg q5-10 min to ma of 80 mg[21]
 - Consider using 1 mL 2% lidocaine added to every 10 mL of 10 mg/mL concentration propofol
 - Average dosage required ~100-125 mg
 
 
Disposition
- Outpatient referral to primary care or neurology for recurrent, recalcitrant headaches
 - Admission for status migranosus
 
See Also
External Links
References
- ↑ Edlow JA, Panagos PD, Godwin SA, Thomas TL, Decker WW; American College of Emergency Physicians. Clinical policy: critical issues in the evaluation and management of adult patients presenting to the emergency department with acute headache. Ann Emerg Med. 2008 Oct;52(4):407-36. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2008.07.001.
 - ↑ Jolt accentuation of headache: the most sensitive sign of CSF pleocytosis. Headache. 1991 Mar;31(3):167-71.
 - ↑ Absence of jolt accentuation of headache cannot accurately rule out meningitis in adults. Am J Emerg Med. 2013 Nov;31(11):1601-4
 - ↑ Jolt accentuation of headache and other clinical signs: poor predictors of meningitis in adults. Am J Emerg Med. 2014 Jan;32(1):24-8
 - ↑ Metoclopramide for Pain and Nausea in Patients with Migraine. Am Fam Physician. 2005 May 1;71(9):1770.
 - ↑ Friedman BW, et al. Diphenhydramine as Adjuvant Therapy for Acute Migraine: An Emergency Department-Based Randomized Clinical Trial. Annals of EM. January 2016. 67(1):32-39.
 - ↑ Brown CR, Moodie JE, Wild VM, Bynum LJ. Comparison of intravenous ketorolac tromethamine and morphine sulfate in the treatment of postoperative pain. Pharmacotherapy. 1990;10(6Patient 2):116S-121S.
 - ↑ Colman et al Paraenteral dexamethasone for acute severe migraine headache: meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials for preventing recurrence. BMJ 2008 Jun.;336(7657):1359–1361
 - ↑ Demirkaya S et al. Efficacy of intravenous magnesium sulfate in the treatment of acute migraine attacks. Headache. 2001 Feb;41(2):171-7.
 - ↑ Shahien R et al. Intravenous sodium valproate aborts migraine headaches rapidly. Acta Neurol Scand. 2011 Apr;123(4):257-65.
 - ↑ Thomas MC et al. Droperidol for the treatment of acute migraine headaches. Ann Pharmacother. 2015 Feb;49(2):233-40.
 - ↑ Gaffigan ME et al. A Randomized Controlled Trial of Intravenous Haloperidol vs. Intravenous Metoclopramide for Acute Migraine Therapy in the Emergency Department. J Emerg Med. 2015 Sep;49(3):326-34.
 - ↑ Silberstein SD et al. Olanzapine in the treatment of refractory migraine and chronic daily headache. Headache. 2002 Jun;42(6):515-8.
 - ↑ Rozen TD. Olanzapine as an abortive agent for cluster headache. Headache. 2001;41(8):813-816.
 - ↑ Farkas J. PulmCrit. PulmCrit- Intravenous olanzapine: Faster than IM olanzapine, safer than IV haloperidol? Feb 1, 2016. http://emcrit.org/pulmcrit/intravenous-olanzapine-haloperidol/
 - ↑ Sin B et al. The use of subdissociative-dose ketamine for acute pain in the emergency department. Acad Emerg Med. 2015 Mar;22(3):251-7.
 - ↑ Mellick LB et al. Treatment of headaches in the ED with lower cervical intramuscular bupivacaine injections: a 1-year retrospective review of 417 patients. Headache. 2006 Oct;46(9):1441-9.
 - ↑ The Efficacy of Propofol vs. Subcutaneous Sumatriptan for Treatment of Acute Migraine Headaches in the Emergency Department: A DBCT. Pain Prac. 2014 Jul 12.
 - ↑ Fortuitous Finding – IV Propofol: Unique Effectiveness in Treating Intractable Migraine. Krusz, John C. Headache 2000;40:224-230.
 - ↑ Simmonds MK. The effect of single-dose porpofol injection on pain and quality of life in chronic daily headaches: a RDBCT. Anesth Analg. 2009 3Dec;109(6):1972-80.
 - ↑ Soleimanpour et al. BMC Neurology 2012. 12:114. 90 pts in ED w/ Migraine.
 

