How do you diagnose and treat patients with cervicogenic headache?
Answer from: at Academic Institution
I struggle with cervicogenic headaches. Conceptually, it is a secondary headache disorder with headache attributed to a disorder of the cervical spine and its component bony, disc, and/or soft tissue elements.
The ICHD-3 criteria help make this causal attribution. If a headache begins in relation t...
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at URMC Neurology I agree with Dr. @Lipton. Often I will try migrain...
I see a lot of cervicogenic headache in my TBI clinic. Diagnosis is based off of symptoms and physical exam. Patients will typically complain of neck pain/tightness and/or occipital pain. This pain will frequently radiate to the forehead. Patients frequently wake up with these headaches and also lim...
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at St Vincent Mercy Thank you so much for sharing your experience. We ...
at Weill Cornell Medical College I know that we commonly give trigger point injecti...
Totally agree with all management. A unilateral or bilateral occipital block with possible 1-2 trigger point injection usually gives 80-90 % relief in pain and is diagnostic and therapeutic. Then you can educate the patient about better neck posture and stretching neck exercises along with tradition...
If the patient is in severe pain and palpation over the greater occipital nerve exit area produces or exacerbates the head pain, I will perform a greater occipital nerve block and put the patient on an NSAID, if no contraindication, as well as starting the patient on a course of manual neck PT treat...
There is a significant overlap of post-TBI headaches with migraine headaches. In those patients who you feel have migraine, valproate can certainly help, although I do not use it very often. I typically start with propranolol or nortriptyline. The latter is nice if insomnia is a problem. I stay away...
I agree with Dr. @Lipton. Often I will try migrain...