Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3805145 | Medicine | 2008 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Headache is one of the most common symptoms seen in both General Practice and Neurology clinics. The Physician's first duty is to exclude and treat any specific structural cause - especially subarachnoid haemorrhage and meningitis if the history is short, and temporal arteritis and cervical spondylosis if it is longer. It is unusual for a cerebral tumour to present with a headache for more than three months without physical signs being present. This review discusses all the common causes of acute, chronic, recurrent and progressive headache as seen in out-patient practice. The majority have migraine, a few have cluster headache and rarer trigemino-autonomic cephalalgias. Headaches are a major cause of distress and impaired productivity in the general population, and much can be reversed with appropriate medication given in adequate doses.
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Authors
Richard Peatfield,