| Literature DB >> 32448142 |
Alejandro Labastida-Ramírez1, Silvia Benemei2, Maria Albanese3, Antonina D'Amico4, Giovanni Grillo5, Oxana Grosu6, Devrimsel Harika Ertem7, Jasper Mecklenburg8, Elena Petrovna Fedorova9, Pavel Řehulka10, Francesca Schiano di Cola11, Javier Trigo Lopez12, Nina Vashchenko13, Antoinette MaassenVanDenBrink1, Paolo Martelletti14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Headache is a common complication of traumatic brain injury. The International Headache Society defines post-traumatic headache as a secondary headache attributed to trauma or injury to the head that develops within seven days following trauma. Acute post-traumatic headache resolves after 3 months, but persistent post-traumatic headache usually lasts much longer and accounts for 4% of all secondary headache disorders. MAIN BODY: The clinical features of post-traumatic headache after traumatic brain injury resemble various types of primary headaches and the most frequent are migraine-like or tension-type-like phenotypes. The neuroimaging studies that have compared persistent post-traumatic headache and migraine found different structural and functional brain changes, although migraine and post-traumatic headache may be clinically similar. Therapy of various clinical phenotypes of post-traumatic headache almost entirely mirrors the therapy of the corresponding primary headache and are currently based on expert opinion rather than scientific evidence. Pharmacologic therapies include both abortive and prophylactic agents with prophylaxis targeting comorbidities, especially impaired sleep and post-traumatic disorder. There are also effective options for non-pharmacologic therapy of post-traumatic headache, including cognitive-behavioral approaches, onabotulinum toxin injections, life-style considerations, etc.Entities:
Keywords: Headache; Migraine; Trauma; Traumatic brain injury; Treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32448142 PMCID: PMC7245945 DOI: 10.1186/s10194-020-01122-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Headache Pain ISSN: 1129-2369 Impact factor: 7.277
Comparison of the characteristics between persistent PTH and primary headaches
| Persistent PTH | Migraine | Tension-type headache | Cluster headache | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18–58% after TBI | 6–33% | 62% | 0.1% | |
-Prior history of headache -Female gender - Older age - Family history of headache | -Young age -Female gender | -Anxiety -Depression | -Young age -Male gender | |
| Variable | 180 min-3 days | 30 min-7 days | 15–180 min | |
-Migraine-like -Tension-type headache like -Cluster like | -Severe intensity -Unilateral location -Pulsatile quality -Aggravated by activity | -Mild/moderate intensity -Bilateral location -Pressing quality -Not aggravated by activity | -Severe intensity -Unilateral, orbital or periorbital | |
-Sleep disorders -Affective and behavioral disorders -Cognitive deficits | -Nausea or vomiting -Photophobia and phonophobia | -Photophobia, phonophobia or nausea | -Conjunctival injection, nasal congestion, eyelid edema, miosis, ptosis. -Sense of restlessness or agitation | |
-Less cortical thickness in bilateral frontal regions and right hemisphere parietal regions of the brain -Gray matter changes in the prefrontal cortex. | -White matter hyperintensities | -Normal | -Normal | |
| Early abnormalities (focal slowing, absence of activity, amplitude asymmetries) | -H response to flicker stimulation -Abnormal resting-state EEG rhythmic activity | Normal | Normal | |
-Behavioral -Drugs depending on phenotype | -Acute: NAIDs / triptans -Preventive: β-blockers, antiepileptics, antihypertensive, CGRP Abs | -Acute: NAIDs -Preventive: antidepressants | -Acute: triptans/O2 -Preventive: corticosteroids, verapamil |