| Literature DB >> 23565739 |
Michele Viana1, Cristina Tassorelli, Marta Allena, Giuseppe Nappi, Ottar Sjaastad, Fabio Antonaci.
Abstract
Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias (TACs) and hemicrania continua (HC) are relatively rare but clinically rather well-defined primary headaches. Despite the existence of clear-cut diagnostic criteria (The International Classification of Headache Disorders, 2nd edition - ICHD-II) and several therapeutic guidelines, errors in workup and treatment of these conditions are frequent in clinical practice. We set out to review all available published data on mismanagement of TACs and HC patients in order to understand and avoid its causes. The search strategy identified 22 published studies. The most frequent errors described in the management of patients with TACs and HC are: referral to wrong type of specialist, diagnostic delay, misdiagnosis, and the use of treatments without overt indication. Migraine with and without aura, trigeminal neuralgia, sinus infection, dental pain and temporomandibular dysfunction are the disorders most frequently overdiagnosed. Even when the clinical picture is clear-cut, TACs and HC are frequently not recognized and/or mistaken for other disorders, not only by general physicians, dentists and ENT surgeons, but also by neurologists and headache specialists. This seems to be due to limited knowledge of the specific characteristics and variants of these disorders, and it results in the unnecessary prescription of ineffective and sometimes invasive treatments which may have negative consequences for patients. Greater knowledge of and education about these disorders, among both primary care physicians and headache specialists, might contribute to improving the quality of life of TACs and HC patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23565739 PMCID: PMC3620440 DOI: 10.1186/1129-2377-14-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Figure 1Flow-diagram of the review process. * by checking the references of relevant papers and reviews as well as literature that was known to be relevant by the authors.
Data extracted from case report/series and clinical/population studies dealing with diagnostic/therapeutic errors in CH
| Van Alboom et al., 2009 [ | 85 | Clinic-based series | 90-item questionnaire | 44.4 mths | Migraine (45%), sinusitis (23%), tooth/jaw problems (23%), TTH (16%), TN (16%), ophthalmological problems (10%), neck problems (7%), nose problems (5%) | 31% of pts had invasive therapy prior to CH diagnosis, including dental procedures (21%) and sinus surgery (10%) | ≥3 (in 52% pts) | Propranolol (12%), amitriptyline (9%), carbamazepine (12%) |
| Eross et al. 2007 [ | 1 | General population study (SAMS) | Direct interview | NR | Sinus headache | NR | self-diagnosed | NR |
| Jensen et al. 2007 [ | 85 | Clinic-based series§ | Semistructured telephone interview | 8 yrs (range 0–35) for ECH and 9 yrs (range 0–39) for CCH | NR | Non-medical treatment was received by 58% (49/85) of the cluster patients | NR. 44.7% (38/85) of the CH pts had previously been admitted to hospital due to CH | NR |
| Schurks et al. 2006 [ | 246 | Clinic- and non-clinic- based | Direct interview (telephone or face-to-face) or standardized mailed questionnaire | NR | NR | NR | NR | 25% of patients used non-first-choice medication (such as opioids) |
| Bahra and Goadsby 2004 [ | 230 | Non-clinic-based (76%) and clinic-based (24%) | Direct interview (telephone or face- to-face) | 2.6 yrs (1990s) to 22.3 yrs (1960s) | NR | 52% of pts who had been seen by a dentist or ENT surgeon had an invasive procedure | Mean 3 GPs. 2/3 of the pts seen by another specialist: dentist (45%), ENT (27%), optician (43%), opht (15%), others (7%) | Beta-blocker (43%), pizotifen (32%), TCAs (32%); alternative therapy (including acupuncture in 40%, herbal treatment in 31%, chiropractic treatment in 23%, homeopathy in 18%) |
| Van Vliet et al. 2003 [ | 1163 | Nationwide study clinic- and non-clinic- based population | Questionnaire | 3 yrs (range 1 wk–48 yrs) | Sinusitis (21%), migraine (17%), dental-related pain (11%) | Tooth extraction (16%) and ENT operation (12%) | Dentists (34%), ENT specialists (33%), and alternative therapists (33%) | NR |
| Sjastaad & Bakketeig, 2003 [ | 7 | General population study (Vågå study) on headache epidemiology | Direct interview plus physical and neurological examination | 11 yrs (range <1 – 28) | NR (5 out of 7 pts had never consulted a physician) | NR (5 out of 7 pts had never consulted a physician) | 5 out of 7 pts had never consulted a physician | NR |
| Klapper et al. 2000 [ | 693 | Internet-based survey | Internet questionnaire | 6.6 yrs | 3.9 (average number of incorrect diagnoses before CH) NOS | 5% had surgery (mostly sinus or deviated septum surgery), other pts were prescribed with sinus medications | 4.3 (3.3 gave an incorrect diagnosis) | Propranolol (27.2%) amitriptyline (16.4%), cyproheptadine (2.3%) |
| Hoffert 1995 [ | 1 | Case report | Case report | 5 yrs | Dental pain | Extractions of all the teeth | Dentist | NR |
| Bittar and Graff-Radford 1992 [ | 33 | Clinic-based series | Review of clinical chart | 8 yrs (mean duration of pain) | NR | 42% of pts received inappropriate dental treatment which was often irreversible, almost all pts received different medications (NSAIDs, opiates, AEDs, TCAs) | Consultant seen before: 72% neurologist, 42% dentist, 27% internist, 12% ENT, 9% allergist | NR |
CH: cluster headache; TTH: tension-type headache; TN: trigeminal neuralgia; wk: week; mths: months; yrs: years; SAMS: The Sinus, Allergy and Migraine Study; ECH: episodic cluster headache; CCH: chronic cluster headache; NSAIDs: non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs; AEDs: anti-epileptic drugs; TCAs: tricyclic antidepressants. NOS: not otherwise specified; NR: not reported; opht: ophthalmologist. § 100 randomly chosen patients with the initial diagnosis of cluster headache seen at the Department of Neurology, Glostrup Hospital and the Danish Headache Centre between October 1998 and September 2003.
Data extracted from case reports dealing with diagnostic/therapeutic errors in PH
| Alonso and Nixdorf 2006 [ | 1 | Case report | NR | TMD | Splint therapy and bite adjustments | NR |
| Sarlani er al 2003 [ | 1 | Case report | 2 yrs | TN and sinusitis | Maxillary sinus surgery, carbamazepine and prednisone, paracetamol | NR |
| Benoliel and Sharav 1998 [ | 7 | Case reports | 10 mths (range 1–30) | Pain of dental origin (4), TMD (1), CH (1) * | 2 pts had irreversible treatments (1 extraction, 1 RCT), and 1 pt received antibiotics | Mostly at least one dental practitioner |
| Moncada and Graff-Radford 1995 [ | 1§ | Case report | 12 yrs | TMD | Complete mouth reconstruction then recommendation to have condyloplasty | 3 neurologists, 1 dentist, 1 oral surgeon |
| Delcanho and Graff-Radford 1993 [ | 2 | Case report | Case 1: NR; Case 2: 3 yrs | Case 1: dental pain, migraine; Case 2: TN, TMD | Case 1: RCT, migraine prophylactic medications; Case 2: phenytoin 100 mg t.i.d. | Case 1: numerous physicians including dentist, neurologist, internal medicine specialist; Case 2: 2 dentists, 1 GP, 1 ENT specialist |
PH: paroxysmal hemicrania; TMD: temporomandibular disorder; TN: trigeminal neuralgia; CH: cluster headache; mths: months; yrs: years; NR: not reported; RCT: root canal therapy; * in one patient no previous diagnosis were reported; § together with another 7 indomethacin-responsive headache patients with orofacial pain as the presenting symptom, 2 of whom were chronic paroxysmal hemicrania cases already included in a previous article [24].
Data extracted from case reports dealing with diagnostic/therapeutic errors in SUNCT
| Alore et al. 2006 [ | 1 | Case report | 9 yrs | TN, CH, atypical migraine | carbamazepine, phenytoin, propranolol, indomethacin and lithium | NR |
| Benoliel and Sharav 1998 [ | 1 | Case report | 2 yrs | TN | carbamazepine, baclofen, and amitriptyline | Neurologist and other physicians (NOS) |
SUNCT: short-lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing; TN: trigeminal neuralgia; CH: cluster headache; yrs: years; NR: not reported; NOS: not otherwise specified.
Data extracted from case reports/case series dealing with diagnostic/therapeutic errors in HC
| Cortijo et al. 2012 [ | 22 | Case series selected from a clinical population over a 3-year period | 86.1 ± 106.5 mths (range 3–360) | None | NR | NR |
| Prakash et al. 2010 [ | 4 | Case reports | 22 yrs, 3 yrs, 2 yrs, 15 mths | Atypical facial pain, atypical odontalgia, sinusitis, caries, pulpitis, psychiatric disorder, chronic migraine | All the patients had dental extractions (6 in one pt), some had sinus surgery, root canal treatment | Several dentists, general physicians, neurologist and ENT specialist (NOS) |
| Rossi et al. 2009 [ | 25 | Case series selected from a clinical population over a 3-year period | 5 yrs | Migraine (52%), CH (28%), sinus headache (20%), dental pain (20%), atypical facial pain (16%), stress headache (16%), CEH (8%) | NSAIDs (92%), triptans (32%), antidepressants (32%), and antiepileptics (24%). 36% received invasive treatments. 36% had recourse to complementary and alternative medicine | 4.6 (GP 100%, neurologist 80%, ENT specialist 44%, ophthalmologist 40%, dentist 32%, headache specialist 28%) |
| Taub et al. 2008 [ | 2 | Case reports | 1.5 yrs; 8 mths | TMD, dental pain, CH, migraine, CPH | Topiramate, nortriptyline, melatonin, verapamil, gabapentin | 3 dental practitioners; 1 ENT specialist |
| Eross et al. 2007 [ | 1 | Case report | NR | Sinus headache | NR | NR |
| Alonso and Nixdorf 2006 [ | 1 | Case report | 6 mths | Dental pain, CEH | Dental extraction, cervical adjustment, multiple chronic pain medications | 4 (dentist, chiropractor, general physician, neurologist) |
| Benoliel et al. 2002 [ | 1 | Case report | 2 yrs | Dental pain, migraine, CEH | Dental treatment (NOS), intensive physiotherapy, paracetamol, propranolol, diazepam, ergotamine combination, diclofenac sodium | 3 (neurologist, dentist, ENT specialist) |
HC: hemicrania continua; CH: cluster headache; CEH: cervicogenic headache; TMD: temporomandibular disorder; CPH: chronic paroxysmal hemicrania; mths: months; yrs: years; NR: not reported; NOS: not otherwise specified.