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NINDS Headache Information Page: NINDS
Article title: NINDS Headache Information Page: NINDS
Conditions: Headache
What is Headache?
When a person has a headache, several areas of the head can hurt, including a network of nerves that extends over the scalp and certain nerves in the face, mouth, and throat. The muscles of the head and the blood vessels found along the surface and at the base of the brain are also sensitive to pain because they contain delicate nerve fibers. The bones of the skull and tissues of the brain itself never hurt because they lack pain-sensitive nerve fibers. The ends of these pain-sensitive nerves, called nociceptors, can be stimulated by stress, muscular tension, dilated blood vessels, and others triggers of headache. Vascular headaches (migraines are a kind of vascular headache) are thought to involve abnormal function of the brain's blood vessels or vascular system; muscle contraction headaches appear to involve the tightening or tensing of facial and neck muscles; and traction and inflammatory headaches are symptoms of other disorders, ranging from brain tumor to stroke to sinus infection. Some types of headache are signals of more serious disorders: sudden, severe headache; headache associated with convulsions; headache accompanied by confusion or loss of consciousness; headache following a blow on the head; headache associated with pain in the eye or ear; persistent headache in a person who was previously headache free; recurring headache in children; headache associated with fever; headache that interferes with normal life. Physicians will obtain a full medical history and may order a blood test to screen for thyroid disease, anemia, or infections or x-rays to rule out a brain tumor or blood clots. CTs, MRIs, and EEGs may be recommended. An eye exam is usually performed to check for weakness in the eye muscle or unequal pupil size. Some scientists believe that fatigue, glaring or flickering lights, the weather, and certain foods may trigger migraine headaches.
Is there any
treatment?
Not all headaches require medical attention. Some result
from missed meals or occasional muscle tension and are easily remedied. If
the problem is not relieved by standard treatments, a headache sufferer
may be referred to an internist, a neurologist, or a psychologist. Drug
therapy, biofeedback training, stress reduction, and elimination of
certain foods from the diet are the most common methods of preventing and
controlling migraine and other vascular headaches. Regular exercise can
also reduce the frequency and severity of migraine headaches. Temporary
relief can sometimes be obtained by using cold pack or by pressing on the
bulging artery found in front of the ear on the painful side of the head.
What is the
prognosis?
About 90 percent of chronic headache patients can be
helped.
What research is being
done?
One theory of headaches is that people who suffer from severe
headache and other types of chronic pain have lower levels of endorphins
than people who are generally pain free. Thermography is an experimental
technique for diagnosing headache. In thermography, an infrared camera
converts skin temperature into a color picture, or thermogram, with
different degrees of heat appearing as different colors. Researchers have
found that thermograms of headache patients show strikingly different heat
patterns from those of people who never or rarely get headaches.
American Council for Headache Education
19 Mantua Road
Mt. Royal, NJ 08061
achehq@talley.com
http://www.achenet.org/
Tel:
856-423-0258 800-255-ACHE (255-2243)
Fax: 856-423-0082
National Headache Foundation
428 West St. James Place
2nd
Floor
Chicago, IL 60614-2750
info@headaches.org
http://www.headaches.org/
Tel:
773-388-6399 888-NHF-5552 (643-5552)
Fax: 773-525-7357
Related NINDS Publications and Information
Information
booklet about headaches, including migraines.
Chronic pain information page
compiled by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
(NINDS).
Information booklet on
pain compiled by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke (NINDS).
A short update on migraines and
migraine research from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke (NINDS).
Pseudotumor Cerebri (Benign
Intracranial Hypertension) information sheet compiled by NINDS.
This fact sheet is in the public domain. You may copy it.Provided
by:
The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
National Institutes of Health
Bethesda, MD
20892
» Next page: NINDS Hemifacial Spasm Information Page: NINDS
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