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Cluster headache - A prospective clinical study with diagnostic implications

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 3, Pages 354-361

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.58.3.354

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Background: Cluster headache, when compared with migraine or tension-type headache, is an uncommon form of primary neurovascular headache. However, with a prevalence of approximately 0.1% and a lengthy history of disabling and distressing episodic pain, cluster headache is an important neurologic problem. Methods: Patients (n = 230) were recruited from our specialist clinic (24%) or from support groups (76%). All patients had a detailed history taken by at least two physicians and were assigned diagnoses according to the International Headache Society Diagnostic Guidelines. Results: The pain characteristics were of a strictly unilateral, predominantly retro-orbital (92%) and temporal pain (70%). Of the cranial autonomic features, lacrimation (91%) was the most common. Nausea (50%), photophobia (56%); and phonophobia (43%) often were noted, as was a sense of agitation or restlessness in 93% of patients. Typical migrainous aura was noted in 14% of this cohort. Most patients (79%) had episodic cluster headache, which was largely the same clinically as chronic cluster headache except for the persistence of attacks over time. The overall male-to-female ratio in this sample was 2.5:1, and this has decreased with time. Neither oral contraceptive use, menses, menopause; nor hormone replacement therapy had any consistent effect on cluster headache in women. Less than half of the patients had tried injectable sumatriptan, and many had not tried high-flow oxygen. Several unproven preventative agents that usually are used in migraine and an array of alternative therapies had been used; none of the latter was consistently effective. Conclusion: Patients with cluster headache offer a population of primary headache patients with devastating acute attacks of pain. The syndrome is stereotyped with effective evidence-based treatments that are prescribed in only half of patients having cluster headache.

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