Diagnosis of Chronic headache
Tests and diagnosis discussion for Chronic headache:
Diagnosing a headache is like playing Twenty Questions. Experts agree
that a detailed question-and-answer session with a patient can often
produce enough information for a diagnosis. Many types of headaches have
clear-cut symptoms which fall into an easily recognizable pattern.
Patients may be asked: How often do you have headaches? Where is the
pain? How long do the headaches last? When did you first develop
headaches? The patient's sleep habits and family and work situations may
also be probed.
Most physicians will also obtain a full medical history from the
patient, inquiring about past head trauma or surgery, eye strain, sinus
problems, dental problems, difficulties with opening and closing of the
jaw, and the use of medications. This may be enough to suggest strongly
that the patient has migraine or cluster headaches. A complete and careful
physical and neurological examination will exclude many possibilities and
the suspicion of aneurysm, meningitis, or certain brain tumors. A blood
test may be ordered to screen for thyroid disease, anemia, or infections
which might cause a headache.
A test called an electroencephalogram (EEG) may be given to measure
brain activity. EEG's can indicate a malfunction in the brain, but they
cannot usually pinpoint a problem that might be causing a headache. A
physician may suggest that a patient with unusual headaches undergo a
computed tomographic (CT) scan and/or a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
scan. The scans enable the physician to distinguish, for example, between
a bleeding blood vessel in the brain and a brain tumor, and are important
diagnostic tools in cases of headache associated with brain lesions or
other serious disease. CT scans produce X-ray images of the brain that
show structures or variations in the density of different types of tissue.
MRI scans use magnetic fields and radio waves to produce an image that
provides information about the structure and biochemistry of the
brain.
If an aneurysm-an abnormal ballooning of a blood vessel-is suspected, a
physician may order a CT scan to examine for blood and then an angiogram.
In this test, a special fluid which can be seen on an X-ray is injected
into the patient and carried in the bloodstream to the brain to reveal any
abnormalities in the blood vessels there. (Source: excerpt from Headache -- Hope Through Research: NINDS)
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Signs of Chronic headache
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