I have a primary headache, and the only cure is...
You been... THUNDASTRUCK
Vasssscular
Baby on Board
Under Pressure
100

These three classes of medications are first-line for classic migraine treatment.

  1. NSAIDs (Ketorolac 15mg IV/IM x 1)

  2. Dopamine Antagonists (Metoclopramide 10mg IV x 1)

  3. Triptans (Sumatriptan 50-100mg PO x 1)

100

80% of nontraumatic SAH’s are caused by this etiology

Saccular (berry) aneurysm
100

This ocular finding may be present in Central Venous Thrombosis, as well as other causes of increased intracranial pressure.

Papilledema

100

A 35 year old female G1P0 at 32 weeks GA presenting with a new severe headache should prompt the following immediate investigation.

Blood Pressure measurement

(SBP > 160 mm Hg or DSB > 110 mm Hg)

100

This headache worsens when upright, improves when supine, and may be treated with... caffeine or blood? Yuck!

Post–Dural Puncture Headache

200

The role of this medication/dose/route is not abortive but to prevent recurrence of migraine.

Dexamethasone 10mg IV/IM

200

This is the next step after a non-con CT Head you ordered for SAH after 8 hours onset returns normal.

LP for Xanthochromia OR further imaging (CTA / MRI) (equally sensitive)

200

This partial syndrome is seen in 25% of carotid artery dissections due to stretch of sympathetic fibres travelling along the internal carotid.

Partial Horner Syndrome: ptosis, miosis, but no anhidrosis.

200

From the Greek "to disable by a stroke", this should be on the differential for a post-partum woman who presents with thunderclap headache, loss of visual field/diplopia and alerted LOC.

Pituitary Apoplexy

Diagnose with MRI > CT

Consider adrenal insufficiency, treat with hydrocortisone.

200

When considering headaches in the setting of hypertension, Rosen's suggests you should consider pre-eclampsia, intracranial hemorrhage, and this more nebulous entity:

Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome
300

This simple intervention will actually abort 80% of cluster headaches in 15 minutes.

High flow O2 at 15L/min via NRB

300

After diagnosis of SAH, these are the target BPs (upper, lower) and the IV medications used to achieve them:

  1. SBP<160; 95<MAP<130 

  2. Labetalol / Nicardipine

300

Thunderstorm? This diagnosis presents as a series of thunderclap headaches usually triggered by exertion, Valsalva, sexual activity, emotional stress, or vasoactive substances.

Reversible Cerebral Vasoconstriction Syndrome 

300

No babies allowed here: Name a toxin, a substance, and a medication cause of headache.

Carbon Monoxide, Cocaine, Nasal Decongestants

300

This measurement should be taken in a patient presenting with unilateral headache involving the eye, blurry vision, and conjunctivitis.

Intraocular Pressure >30mmHg for Acute Angle Closure Glaucoma

400

These are three example symptoms classic of cluster migraine:

  1. Lacrimation

  2. Rhinorrhea

  3. Ptosis

  4. Miosis

  5. Forehead/facial sweating

  6. Pain: unilateral sharp stabbing pain

400

These four risk factors associated with SAH

  1. Age (40-60)

  2. HTN

  3. Smoking

  4. EtOh

  5. Sympathomimetic drugs

  6. Genetic: ADPCKD, Marfan, Ehlers Danlos

400

As opposed to carotid artery dissections, vertebral artery dissections may present with this constellation of neurologic findings.

1. Wallenberg Syndrome: dysmetria, ataxia, ipsilateral hemiplegia and contralateral loss of pain and temperature sensation.
OR
2. Posterior circulation stroke syndromes: vertigo, diplopia, visual field deficits.

400

The following 3 agents are recommended antihypertensives in the setting of pre-eclampsia.

Labetalol 20mg IV
Hydralazine 5-10mg IV
Nifedipine 10mg IV

400

Diagnostic criteria for Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension include this measurement for CSF opening pressure in adults.

>250 mm in adults

>280 mm in children

500

An injection of 0.5% bupivacaine ⅓ distance between the occipital protuberance and the mastoid process creates this effective treatment for migraines that fail first-line therapy.

Greater Occipital Nerve Block

500

A patient presents stuporous, with dense hemiparesis, is subsequently diagnosed with SAH. This scale is used to represent their clinical grading, and their presentation corresponds to a scale of:

Hunt and Hess Score: 4

500

Three of these five diagnostic criteria are required to diagnose Giant Cell Arteritis

1. Age ≥ 50

2. New headache type, particularly in association with visual loss or jaw claudication

3. Temporal artery tenderness or tenderness of other extracranial arteries

4. ESR ≥ 50 mm/h or CRP ≥ 10 mg/L

5. Positive imaging finding (US/MRI) or temporal artery biopsy

500

The new ACOG definition for Pre-eclampsia is...

Hypertension >140/90 x 2 /4h or >160/110 x 1 AND

Proteinuria (Protein:Cr 0.3mg/dL) OR 

ANY OF SEVERE FEATURES: Thrombocytopenia, Renal Insufficiency, Impaired Liver Function, Pulmonary Edema, New Headache/Vision Disturbance/RUQ pain.

500

Boring Rosen's Box Alert!!! These are 5 most common types of intracranial malignancy causing headache.

Metastatic: Breast, Lung, GI, Melanoma
Meningioma
Glioblastoma
Primary CNS lymphoma
Pituitary adenoma

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