| Literature DB >> 30961531 |
Andreas Straube1, Anna Andreou2,3.
Abstract
Primary headaches are one of the most prevalent neurological disorders and can occur during a wide range of lifespan. Primary headaches, especially migraine, are cyclic disorders with a complex sequence of symptoms within every headache attack. There is no systematic review of whether these symptoms changes during lifespan. Indeed, the clinical presentation of migraine shows an age-dependent change with a significantly shorter duration of the attacks and occurrence of different paroxysmal symptoms, such as vomiting, abdominal pain or vertigo, in childhood and, in contrast, largely an absence of autonomic signs and a more often bilateral headache in the elderly. The age-dependent differences in the clinical presentation are less distinct in cluster headache and, especially, in tension-type headache. The differences in the clinical presentation are in agreement with the idea that the connectivity of hypothalamic areas with different brainstem areas, especially the central parasympathetic areas, is important for the clinical manifestation of migraine, as well as, the change during lifespan.Entities:
Keywords: Adults; Aura; Children; Clinical symptoms; Cluster headache; Elderly; Hypothalamus; Migraine; Migraine-related syndromes; Parasympathetic; Sympathetic; Tension-type headache
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30961531 PMCID: PMC6734460 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-019-0985-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Migraine-related syndromes (modified from [35, 45])
| Syndrome | Main symptom | Clinical signs | Duration | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abdominal migraine | Repeated attacks with midline abdominal pain | Accompanied by anorexia, nausea, vomiting, pallor | 2–72 h | 0.01% |
| Benign paroxysmal torticollis | Paroxysmal head tilt, sometimes also head rotation | Accompanied by pallor, irritability, malaise, vomiting, ataxia | Minutes to days | 0.83% |
| Benign paroxysmal vertigo | Acute vertigo | Accompanied by nystagmus, unsteady gait, pallor, vomiting | Minutes to hours | 0.43% |
| cyclic vomiting | attacks with intense nausea and vomiting, occurring periodically | Nausea/vomiting several times per hour | 1 h to days | 0.99% |
| Confusional migraine | Attacks with acute confusion | Restlessness, agitation, altered sensorium, disorientation, bizarre behavior | Less than 6 h | 10% of childhood migraine |
| Somnambulism | Unclear if related, rising up from sleep and performing complex motor behavior | Typically occurring during slow-wave sleep, restless leg syndrome may be associated | Less than 1 h | 0.07% |
Fig. 1Schematic and incomplete drawing of hypothalmic and cerebellar pathways involved in the modulation of migraine and probably also of periodic syndromes [136, 155, 162, 163, 167–170]. The pathways are not differentiated in excitatory or functionally inhibitory pathways (e.g. the vagal connections to the spinal trigeminal nucleus are functionally inhibitory as it is also shown for the cerebellar pathways to the vestibular nucleus). green = hypothalamus, yellow = thalamus, grey = cerebellum; green = vestibular complex, blue = sensory trigeminal nucleus, pink = area postrema, rose = nucleus ambiguous (as part of the vagal complex)
Clinical differences in primary headaches during lifespan
| Phase of life/headache type | Migraine | Tension-type headache | Cluster headache |
|---|---|---|---|
| Childhood | |||
| Gender (female/male) | Nearly 1:1(f:m) | Probably 1:1(f:m) | Probably 1:1 |
| Attack duration | Less than 2 h | 30 min to 2–4 h | 15 min to 2 h |
| Pain characteristic | More often dull and on both sides | Dull, less intensity | Temporal, orbital, stabbing, high intensity |
| Autonomic symptoms | Vomiting, pallor, abdominal complaints often present | Absent | Typically present |
| Paroxysmal syndromes | Vertigo, vomiting, torticollis, | Absent | Absent |
| Adulthood | |||
| Gender | 2.5–3/1(f:m) | 5:4 (f:m) | 1:2.5–4 (f:m) |
| Attack duration | 4 to 72 h | 30 min to days | 15 min to 3 h |
| Pain characteristic | Pulsating, hemicranial | Dull, less intensity | Temporal, orbital, stabbing, high intensity |
| Autonomic symptoms | Less often | Absent | Typically present |
| Paroxysmal syndromes | Rarely (cyclic vomiting) | Absent | Absent |
| Elderly | |||
| Gender | 2:1 (f:m), prevalence decreasing | 5:4 (f:m), prevalence less decreasing | 1:2.5–4 (f:m), prevalence mostly stable |
| Attack duration | 4 to 72 h | 30 min to days | 15 min to 3 h |
| Pain characteristic | More often dull and on both sides | Dull, less intensity | Temporal, orbital, stabbing, high intensity |
| Autonomic symptoms | Mostly absent | Absent | Less pronounced |
| Paroxysmal syndromes | Absent | Absent | Absent |