00:01
In this lecture, we're going to learn about neuralgiform causes of headache.
00:06
Let's start with a case.
00:08
This is a 68-year-old man with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck
who's previously received chemoradiotherapy
and underwent total laryngectomy for management.
00:19
He presents with several months of diffuse bilateral headache.
00:24
No throbbing, aching, or stabbing.
00:26
He describes this as a burning pain that is electric
and shoots down over the right side of the face, cheek, and jaw.
00:35
The pain can be initiated with chewing.
00:38
On exam, his status post-laryngectomy,
but there are no other neurologic abnormalities.
00:44
So what's the headache syndrome in this patient?
Well, there's some really key clinical descriptions here
that points us towards a neuralgiform headache.
00:54
This patient describes burning pain, that electric shooting sensation
that runs along the trajectory of the trigeminal nerve.
01:02
The trigeminal nerve has three branches, the upper face, the middle check, and the lower jaw;
and this pain shoots along each of those regions
and that's what we see with neuralgiform headaches.
01:15
There's some key associated symptoms that we need to be mindful of here
and this pain is initiated with chewing,
that sensory feedback of chewing results in activation of this aberrant trigeminal nerve
and induces this patient's pain, also a feature of neuralgiform headaches.
01:32
So is this a primary or secondary headache?
Well, this is a secondary headache syndrome until proven otherwise.
01:39
This means we need to evaluate for potential causes of this patient's headache
at the same time as or before initiating treatment.
01:48
So what is the treatment for this headache?
Should we prescribe narcotics for symptom relief?
Perform MRA or CTA to evaluate for aneurysm?
Start verapamil for headache treatment? Or refer to ophthalmology?
Well, prescribe narcotics is something we can do,
it's considered for patients with bone metastasis or cancer pain.
02:10
But this pain is different from what we would see from either a metastasis or cancer related pain,
this neuralgiform quality suggest an underlying neurologic etiology
that requires further workup first.
02:23
We wouldn't start verapamil for this patient, that's the treatment for migraine prevention.
02:27
This patients really needs evaluation for a neuralgiform etiology of his head pain.
02:33
Referral to ophthalmology is something we do for patients
who have headache with vision changes,
but this patient's symptoms are inconsistent with that.
02:42
This suggests neuralgiform pain and requires vascular imaging
for possible vascular compression of the trigeminal nerve.
02:49
So, in this case, performing MRA or CTA
would be the first step in evaluating managing this patient.
02:56
The neuralgiform quality suggest either aneurismal compression of the trigeminal nerve,
the patient could have a dural-based metastasis
from the squamous cell carcinoma or perineural invasion,
growth of that squamous cell carcinoma along the trigeminal nerve causing this patient's pain
and angiography would be one of the initial steps
we'd consider to evaluate for a vascular etiology.