- Trigeminal neuralgia is characterized by sudden, severe facial pain that occurs in the areas of the face served by the trigeminal nerve. The pain is often triggered by light touch or other minor stimuli. Examination will reveal no sensory deficits. Treatment options include pharmacotherapy, microvascular decompression, or trigeminal ganglion block/radiofrequency ablation.
- Cluster headache is a severe headache occurring as multiple attacks and characterized by excruciating unilateral orbital, supraorbital, or temporal pain lasting 15-180 minutes if untreated. Attacks are associated with ipsilateral cranial autonomic features and a sense of restlessness. Treatment involves acute abortive therapy with oxygen or triptans and prevent
4. " I was standing in the shower with the hot water
spraying on my face. It was a fast, jarring jolt of
lightning pain on the left side of my face. For the
next couple of weeks I was immobile. All activities
and interest stopped. My time was spent waiting
apprehensively for the next jab of staggering pain
to hit my face. I dreaded waking up to start another
day of electrical-like pains."
5. The distinguishing features for classical TN are:
Character and location of the pain
Light touch provocation
Examination will reveal patients will have no sensory deficit.
Trigeminal Neuralgia
- Classical Clinical Features
6.
7.
8. Exhibit tactile trigger areas within the trigeminal distribution
- which will precipitate an attack when stimulated.
There are rarely autonomic features.
Triggers include:
Washing face
Shaving
Eating
Brushing teeth
Applying make-up
Talking
Cold wind
To confirm an accurate diagnosis, several provoking factors are usually needed.
9. • Location: Trigeminal Nerve. Predominantly affecting V2
and V3 distributions. Unilateral 97%.
• Age: any, most commonly over 50 years
• Gender: more in women
• Quality: sharp, stabbing or electrical
• Temporality: paroxysmal, remissions and recurrences
• Trigger Zone: often remote to pain, commonly nasolabial
• Trigger stimuli: slight touch, wind, speaking, brushing teeth
• Neurological Examination: NORMAL
Trigeminal Neuralgia
15. Distinct group of patients who have a form of facial neuralgia that has all the
characteristics of tension-type headache, except that it affects the midface;
- it is called midfacial segment pain.
Pain is described as a ‘feeling of pressure’, although some patients feel that their
nose is blocked when they have no nasal airway obstruction.
Mid facial segment pain is symmetric; it might involve areas of the nasion (the
root of the nose), under the bridge of the nose, on either side of the nose, the
peri- or retro-orbital regions, or across the cheeks.
There might be hyperesthesia of the skin and soft tissues over the affected area.
Nasal endoscopy and CT scans are typically normal.
Most respond to low-dose amitriptyline, but noticeable improvement might require
up to 6 weeks.
Mid Facial Segment Pain
17. Case
• A 32 year old joiner presented at 6.25 am to A&E
with an unbearable headache.
• He had been awoken from sleep with an
excruciating left retro-orbital pain. The headache
was associated with photosensitivity on the left
side.
• His headache had woken him about 60 mins
early.
• He described feeling that he wanted to “bash his
head” on the wall. His headache had settled
spontaneously by the time you arrived.
19. Trigeminal Autonomic
Cephalalgias
Cluster Headache
Paroxysmal Hemicrania
SUNCT
Short-lasting
Unilateral
Neuralgiform headache with
Conjunctival injection and
Tearing
orSUNA
Short-lasting
Unilateral
Neuralgiform headache with
Autonomic Features
Unilateral head pain,
predominantly V1
Excruciating
Cranial autonomic
symptoms
Parasympathetic
hyperactivity
Sympathetic deficit
Attack frequency and
duration differs
Treatment responses differ
Highly disabling disorders
20. Trigeminal Autonomic
Cephalalgias
Cluster Headache
Paroxysmal Hemicrania
SUNCT
Short-lasting
Unilateral
Neuralgiform headache with
Conjunctival injection and
Tearing
orSUNA
Short-lasting
Unilateral
Neuralgiform headache with
Autonomic Features
Unilateral head pain,
predominantly V1
Excruciating
Cranial autonomic
symptoms
Parasympathetic
hyperactivity
Sympathetic deficit
Attack frequency and
duration differs
Treatment responses differ
Highly disabling disorders
21. Cluster Headache
• Severe
• Unilateral
• Orbital, supraorbital or
temporal pain
• 15-180 minutes
duration
• Attack frequency
ranging from 1 every
other day to 8 daily
• Associated symptoms:
-Conjunctival injection
-Lacrimation
-Ptosis
-Miosis
-Eyelid oedema
-Nasal congestion
-Rhinorrhea
-Forehead and facial
sweating
• Sense of restlessness or
agitation during
headache
22. Paroxysmal Hemicrania
• Severe
• Unilateral
• Orbital, supraorbital
or temporal pain
• 2-30 minutes
duration
• >5 attacks daily at
least 50% of the time
• Associated symptoms:
-Conjunctival injection
-Lacrimation
-Ptosis
-Miosis
-Eyelid oedema
-Nasal congestion
-Rhinorrhea
-Forehead and facial
sweating
• Stopped completely
by indometacin
25. Acute Treatments for Cluster Headache
Time= 15min 15 min 30 min 30 min
N= 150 134 77 69
Cohen et al, JAMA 2009; van Vliet J et al, Neurology 2003; Cittadini E et al. Arch Neurol 2006; Ekbom K et al.
Acta Neurol Scand. 1993
• Randomised, controlled, double blind studies in cluster headache
*
*
*
*
*P<0.05
26. Verapamil in the preventive treatment of cluster
headache
Leone M et al. Neurology. 2000.
* p < 0.001 vs
placebo
N=30
6/15 0/15
12/15 0/15
*
*15 15
27. Cluster Headache
PREVENTIVE TREATMENTS
Verapamil
• Usually 240-480mg daily
• Up to 960mg daily
• 80-120mg increments
every 10-14 days with ECG
monitoring
Constipation
Nausea and vomiting
Fatigue
Pedal oedema
Bradycardia
Hypotension
Cardiac arrhythmias
Gabai I & Spierings E, Headache, 1989; Leone M et al., Neurology. 2000
28. Management of Cluster Headache
Abortive Treatment
oxygen and/or a subcutaneous or nasal triptan for the acute treatment of
cluster headache.
When using oxygen:
use 100% oxygen at a flow rate of at least 12 litres per minute with a non-
rebreathing mask and a reservoir bag and
arrange provision of home and ambulatory oxygen.
When using a subcutaneous or nasal triptan, ensure the person is offered an
adequate supply
two subcutaneous injections daily or
three nasal sprays daily
Do not offer paracetamol, NSAIDS, opioids, ergots or oral triptans for the
acute treatment of cluster headache.
http://guidance.nice.org.uk/CG150
29. Cluster Headache
PREVENTIVE TREATMENTS
Doses Comments
Verapamil 240-960mg/d ECG monitoring required
Lithium 400-2000mg/d
(0.8-1.0mM)
Regular serum lithium levels, thyroid function
and renal function checks
Methysergide 3-12mg/d Monitoring for visceral fibrosis
Topiramate 50-800mg/d
Gabapentin 900-3600mg/d
Melatonin 9-15mg/d
Valproate 600-2000mg/d
30. Cluster Headache
TRANSITIONAL TREATMENTS
Corticosteroids
• Rapid onset of action and highly effective at high doses
• Attacks recur once the dose is decreased
• Indications:
– Initial add-on until other preventatives effective
– Short-term use for multiple daily attacks
• Prednisolone regime
– 1mg/kg (up to maximum of 60mg) od for 5 days
– Taper thereafter over 2-3 weeks
– Simultaneously introduce a suitable prophylactic
Couch J and Ziegler D, Headache 1978
31. Migraine
• Unilateral throbbing followed by dull
ache
• Painful
• Can have aura phase (visual,
sensory etc..)
• Associated nausea photophobia,
phonophobia
• Drive to lie down in dark room and
sleep
• Can wake from sleep
• Wiped out for days sometimes
“hangover” phase with general
dysfunction
• Attack frequency usually no more
than 1 per every few days or every
day (ie transformed migraine NOT
CLUSTER)
Cluster
• Strictly unilateral with stabbing or
boring quality
• Excruciatingly severe!
• No aura phase usually
• Associated trigeminal autonomic
features (eyelid oedema, conjunctival
injection, tearing blocked nose etc)
• Pacing behavior around room;
agitated ++
• Typically alarm clock headache in
early hours of am
• Attack frequency 1-8 per day
32. • sharp, stabbing pains occurring as a single stab or as a series of stabs,
• occurring mostly in the eye and orbit, temple, or parietal regions.
• Stabs last a few seconds, and may recur throughout the day, usually at
irregular intervals.
• occurs more commonly in migraine sufferers.
• official term is Primary Stabbing Headache.
• also been referred to as "jabs and jolts headache”
• NB no autonomic disturbance and no trigger points..
‘Ice Pick Headaches’
33. • occur exclusively at night, wakes from your sleep at the same time,
usually between 1 and 3 am.
• nick named “alarm clock headache”.
• can be unilateral or bilateral
• Pain is throbbing although not everyone experiences this.
• Pain begins abruptly and can last from 15 minutes to 6 hours, although
typically it is about 30-60 minutes.
• more common amongst women than men.
• N.B. pain is not associated with autonomic features (such as a blocked
nose or watering eyes).
• Similarly, nausea, photophobia and phonophobia are not usually
associated with hypnic headache.
Hypnic Headache