Image Quizzes

Severe pulsing headache

Reviewed by Jasmin Harpe, MD, MPH

Medscape

An 18-year-old female patient presents with severe pulsing headache that began about 6 hours earlier. She describes feeling tired and irritable for the past 2 days and that she has had difficulty concentrating. Earlier in the day, before headache onset, she became extremely fatigued. Describing a "blinding light" in her vision, she is currently highly photophobic. The patient took four ibuprofen 2 hours ago. There is no significant medical history. She is on a regimen of estrogen-progestin and spironolactone for acne. Following advice from her primary care practitioner, she takes magnesium and vitamin B for headache prevention. The patient reports that she does not believe that she has migraines because she has never vomited during an episode. The patient explains that she has always had frequent headaches but that this is the sixth or seventh episode of this type and severity that she has had in the past year. The headaches do not seem to align with her menstrual cycle.

What is the likely diagnosis?

Spontaneous internal carotid artery dissection

Migraine

Sinusitis

Tension headache

Basilar migraine

On the basis of the patient's presentation and described history, the likely diagnosis is migraine. By adolescence, migraine is much more common among female patients and can be connected to the menstrual cycle. The early symptoms before onset of head pain reported by this patient characterize the prodromal phase, which can occur 1-2 days before the headache, followed by the aura phase. Approximately one third of patients with migraine experience episodes with aura, like the visual disturbance described in this case.

Migraine can be diagnosed on a clinical basis, but certain neurologic symptoms with headache should be considered red flags and prompt further workup (ie, stiff neck or fever, or history of head injury or major trauma). Spontaneous internal carotid artery dissection, for example, should be investigated in the differential of younger patients who have severe headache before onset of neurologic symptoms. Patients who present with migraine are very frequently misdiagnosed as having sinus headaches or sinusitis. Relevant clinical findings of acute sinusitis are sinus tenderness or pressure; pain over the cheek which radiates to the frontal region or teeth; redness of nose, cheeks, or eyelids; pain to the vertex, temple, or occiput; postnasal discharge; a blocked nose; coughing or pharyngeal irritation; facial pain; and hyposmia. Tension-type headaches usually are associated with mild or moderate bilateral pain, causing a steady ache as opposed to the throbbing of migraines. Basilar migraine, common among female patients, is marked by vertebrobasilar insufficiency.

The American Headache Society defines migraine by the occurrence of at least five episodes. These attacks must last 4-72 hours and have at least two of these four characteristics: unilateral location, pulsating quality, moderate or severe pain intensity, and aggravation by or causing avoidance of routine physical activity. During these episodes, the patient must experience either photophobia and phonophobia or nausea and/or vomiting. If these signs and symptoms cannot be explained by another diagnosis, the patient is very likely presenting with migraine.

Identifying an effective treatment for migraines is often associated with a trial-and-error period, with an average 4-year gap between diagnosis and initiation of preventive medications. Because the patient's migraines do not seem to respond to non-steroidal anti inflammatory drugs, she may be a candidate for other treatments of mild-to-moderate migraines: nonopioid analgesics, acetaminophen, or caffeinated analgesic combinations. If attacks are moderate or severe, or even mild to moderate but do not respond well to therapy, migraine-specific agents are recommended: triptans, dihydroergotamine (DHE), small-molecule calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) receptor antagonists (gepants), and selective serotonin (5-HT1F) receptor agonists (ditans).

Jasmin Harpe, MD, MPH, Headache Fellow, Department of Neurology, Harvard University, John R. Graham Headache Center, Mass General Brigham, Boston, MA

Jasmin Harpe, MD, MPH, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

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