| Literature DB >> 22767967 |
Abstract
In 1988, diagnostic criteria for headaches were drawn up by the International Headache Society (IHS) and is divided into headaches, cranial neuralgias and facial pain. The 2(nd) edition of the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD) was produced in 2004, and still provides a dynamic and useful instrument for clinical practice. We have examined the current IHC, which comprises 14 groups. The first four cover primary headaches, with "benign paroxysmal vertigo of childhood" being the forms of migraine of interest to otolaryngologists; groups 5 to 12 classify "secondary headaches"; group 11 is formed of "headache or facial pain attributed to disorder of cranium, neck, eyes, ears, nose, sinuses, teeth, mouth or other facial or cranial structures"; group 13, consisting of "cranial neuralgias and central causes of facial pain" is also of relevance to otolaryngology. Neither the current classification system nor the original one has a satisfactory collocation for migraineassociated vertigo. Another critical point of the classification concerns cranio-facial pain syndromes such as Sluder's neuralgia, previously included in the 1988 classification among cluster headaches, and now included in the section on "cranial neuralgias and central causes of facial pain", even though Sluder's neuralgia has not been adequately validated. As we have highlighted in our studies, there are considerable similarities between Sluder's syndrome and cluster headaches. The main features distinguishing the two are the trend to cluster over time, found only in cluster headaches, and the distribution of pain, with greater nasal manifestations in the case of Sluder's syndrome. We believe that it is better and clearer, particularly on the basis of our clinical experience and published studies, to include this nosological entity, which is clearly distinct from an otolaryngological point of view, as a variant of cluster headache. We agree with experts in the field of headaches, such as Olesen and Nappi who contributed to previous classifications, on the need for a revised classification, particularly with regards to secondary headaches. According to the current Committee on headaches, the updated version of the classification, presently under study, is due to be published soon; it is our hope that this revised version will take into account some of the above considerations.Entities:
Keywords: Charlin's neuralgia; Cranial neuralgias ; ENT; Facial pain; International Headache Classification; Migraine; Sluder's neuralgia; Vestibular migraine; Headache
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22767967 PMCID: PMC3383075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Otorhinolaryngol Ital ISSN: 0392-100X Impact factor: 2.124
IHS Classification ICHD-II. Part one: The primary headaches.
| 1. Migraine |
IHS Classification ICHD-II. Part two: The secondary headaches.
| 5. Headache attributed to head and/or neck trauma |
IHS Classification ICHD-II. Part two: The secondary headaches.
| 11. Headache or facial pain attributed to disorder of cranium, neck, eyes, ears, nose, sinuses, teeth, mouth or other facial or cranial structures |
IHS Classification ICHD-II. Part three: Cranial neuralgias, central and primary facial pain and other headaches.
| 13. Cranial neuralgias and central causes of facial pain |
IHS Classification ICHD-II. Headache attributed to disorder of ears.
| 11.4 | Headache attributed to disorder of ears [H60-H95] | G44.844 |
| Coded elsewhere | Headache attributed to acoustic neuroma is coded as 7.4.2 | |
| A. | Headache accompanied by otalgia and fulfilling criteria C and D. | |
| B. | Structural lesion of the ear diagnosed by appropriate investigations. | |
| C. | Headache and otalgia develop in close temporal relation to the structural lesion. | |
| D. | Headache and otalgia resolve simultaneously with remission or successful treatment of the structural lesion. | |
| There is no evidence that any pathology of the ear can cause headache without concomitant otalgia. Structural lesions of the pinna, external auditory canal, tympanic membrane or middle ear may give rise to primary otalgia associated with headache. | ||
IHS Classification ICHD-II. Headache attributed to rhinosinusitis.
| 11.5 | Headache attributed to rhinosinusitis [J01] | G44.845 |
| Coded elsewhere | "Sinus headaches" | |
| A. | Frontal headache accompanied by pain in one or more regions of the face, ears or teeth and fulfilling criteria C and D. | |
| B. | Clinical, nasal endoscopic, CT and/or MRI imaging and/or laboratory evidence of acute or acute-on-chronic rhinosinusitis 1;2. | |
| C. | Headache and facial pain develop simultaneously with onset or acute exacerbation of rhinosinusitis. | |
| D. | Headache and/or facial pain resolve within 7 days after remission or successful treatment of acute or acute-on-chronic rhinosinusitis. | |
| Clinical evidence may include purulence in the nasal cavity, nasal obstruction, hyposmia/anosmia and/or fever. | ||
| Other conditions that are often considered to induce headache are not sufficiently validated as causes of headache. These include deviation of nasal septum, hypertrophy of turbinates, atrophy of sinus membranes and mucosal contact. The last, however, is defined in the appendix under A11.5.1 | ||