| Literature DB >> 32051440 |
D García-Azorín1, M Farid-Zahran2, M Gutiérrez-Sánchez3, M N González-García4, A L Guerrero3,5,6, J Porta-Etessam4.
Abstract
Headache is a common reason to visit the emergency department (ED). Tension-type headache (TTH) is the commonest headache. The diagnosis of TTH implies a mild condition, with no need for special tests. We evaluated the use of the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD) criteria for TTH in the ED. We performed a cross-sectional study including all ED patients with a definite TTH diagnosis in their discharge report for 2.5 years. We evaluated whether the ICHD criteria for TTH were referenced and met. We analysed discrepancies concerning anamnesis or prior history and reclassified patients. A total of 211 out of 2132 patients fulfilled the criteria (9.9%). Only five patients fulfilled TTH criteria. Criteria A-D were referenced in 60-84% of patients and met in 16-74% of these patients. Anamnesis was discrepant in 87.5% as was prior history in 20.8%. After re-reclassification, 21 patients fulfilled the criteria for TTH (five) or probable TTH (16). In 106 patients, another headache was diagnosed, with migraine in 40 (18.9%), secondary headache in 64 (30.3%), and a life-threatening disorder in 13 (6.1%). In our sample, TTH was overdiagnosed. Only a minority of patients fulfilled the ICHD criteria. Inconsistencies in prior medical history or anamnesis were frequent.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32051440 PMCID: PMC7016102 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-59171-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The International Classification of Headache Disorders criteria for Tension-type headache.
| Criterion | Feature | Specific criterion |
|---|---|---|
| A. | Number of episodes | At least 10 episodes of headache. |
| B | Episode duration | Lasting from 30 minutes to seven days |
| C | Headache characteristics | At least two of the following four characteristics: |
| 1. Bilateral location | ||
| 2. Pressing or tightening (non-pulsating) quality | ||
| 3. Mild or moderate intensity | ||
| 4. Not aggravated by routine physical activity, such as walking or climbing stairs | ||
| D | Associated symptoms | Both of the following: |
| 1. no nausea or vomiting | ||
| 2. no more than one of photophobia or phonophobia | ||
| E | Exclusion | Not better accounted for by another ICHD-3 diagnosis |
Figure 1Percentage of patients in which every criterion is referenced; in blue referenced and met; in orange, referenced but unmet.
Figure 2Number of patients re-classified to each ICHD-3 group. On the right column, patients unable to be re-classified.
Number and percentage of patients re-classified into each of the ICHD-3 diagnostic groups with specific diagnosis and codes.
| Headache group | Number of cases (%) | Subtype |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Migraine | 40 (18.9%) | 1.1 Migraine without aura (5) |
| 1.2 Migraine with aura (1) | ||
| 1.3 Chronic migraine (3) | ||
| 1.5 Probable migraine (31) | ||
| 2. Tension-type headache | 21 (10.0%) | 2.2 Frequent tension-type headache (3) |
| 2.3 Chronic tension-type headache (2) | ||
| 2.4 Probable tension-type headache (16) | ||
| 3. Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias | 0 | 0 |
| 4. Other primary headache disorders | 0 | 0 |
| 5. Headache attributed to trauma injury to the head and/or neck | 12 (5.7%) | Acute headache attributed to traumatic injury to the head (11) |
| Acute headache attributed to whiplash (1) | ||
| 6. Headache attributed to cranial and/or cervical vascular disorder | 7 (3.3%) | 6.2.4.2 Persistent headache attributed to past non-traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage (2) |
| 6.3.2 Headache attributed to arteriovenous malformation (AVM) (3) | ||
| 6.7.1 Headache attributed to an intracranial endarterial procedure (1) | ||
| 6.4.1 Headache attributed to giant cell arteritis (1) | ||
| 7. Headache attributed to non-vascular intracranial disorder | 6 (2.8%) | 7.2.1 Post-dural puncture headache (2) |
| 7.2.3 Headache attributed to spontaneous intracranial hypotension (2) | ||
| 7.4.1 Headache attributed to intracranial neoplasm (2) | ||
| 8. Headache attributed to a substance or its withdrawal | 2 (0.9%) | 8.1.9 Headache attributed to occasional use of non-headache medication (2) |
| 9. Headache attributed to infection | 12 (5.7%) | 9.2.2.1 Acute headache attributed to systemic viral infection (12) |
| 10. Headache attributed to disorder of homeostasis | 12 (5.7%) | 10.3.2 Headache attributed to hypertensive crisis without hypertensive encephalopathy (11) |
| 10.1.4 Sleep apnoea headache (1) | ||
| 11. Headache or facial pain attributed to disorder of the cranium, neck eyes, nose, sinuses, mouth or other facial or cervical structure | 13 (6.2%) | 11.3 Headache attributed to disorder of the eyes (2) |
| 11.3.3 Headache attributed to ocular inflammatory disorder (2) | ||
| 11.6 Headache attributed to disorder of the teeth | ||
| 11.5.1 Headache attributed to acute rhinosinusitis (3) | ||
| 11.5.2 Headache attributed to chronic or recurring rhinosinusitis (6) | ||
| 12. Headache attributed to psychiatric disorder | 0 | 0 |
| 13. Painful lesions of the cranial nerves and other facial pain | 1 (0.5%) | Occipital neuralgia (1) |
| Appendix | 1 (0.5%) | A10.8.2 Headache attributed to other metabolic or systemic disorder (polycythaemia vera, viscosity syndrome) (1) |
| Not classifiable | 84 (39.8%) |
Figure 3Percentage of patients that underwent each examination. CT scan (Cranial Tomography).