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Cardiac cephalgia

The purpose of this review was to provide a critical evaluation of medical literature on so-called “cardiac cephalgia” or “cardiac cephalalgia”. The 2004 International Classification of Headache Disorders codes cardiac cephalgia to 10.6 in the group of secondary headaches attributed to disorder of h...

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Autores principales: Bini, Annamaria, Evangelista, Andrea, Castellini, Paola, Lambru, Giorgio, Ferrante, Tullia, Manzoni, Gian Camillo, Torelli, Paola
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Milan 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3451760/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19139804
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0087-x
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author Bini, Annamaria
Evangelista, Andrea
Castellini, Paola
Lambru, Giorgio
Ferrante, Tullia
Manzoni, Gian Camillo
Torelli, Paola
author_facet Bini, Annamaria
Evangelista, Andrea
Castellini, Paola
Lambru, Giorgio
Ferrante, Tullia
Manzoni, Gian Camillo
Torelli, Paola
author_sort Bini, Annamaria
collection PubMed
description The purpose of this review was to provide a critical evaluation of medical literature on so-called “cardiac cephalgia” or “cardiac cephalalgia”. The 2004 International Classification of Headache Disorders codes cardiac cephalgia to 10.6 in the group of secondary headaches attributed to disorder of homoeostasis. This headache is hardly recognizable and is associated to an ischaemic cardiovascular event, of which it may be the only manifestation in 27% of cases. It usually occurs after exertion. Sometimes routine examinations, cardiac enzymes, ECG and even exercise stress test prove negative. In such cases, only a coronary angiogram can provide sufficient evidence for diagnosis. Cardiac cephalgia manifests itself without a specific pattern of clinical features: indeed, in this headache subtype there is a high variability of clinical manifestations between different patients and also within the same patient. It “mimics” sometimes a form of migraine either accompanied or not by autonomic symptoms, sometimes a form of tension-type headache; on other occasions, it exhibits characteristics that can hardly be interpreted as typical of primary headache. Pain location is highly variable. When the headache occurs as the only manifestation of an acute coronary event, the clues for suspicion are a) older age at onset, b) no past medical history of headache, c) presence of risk factors for vascular disorders and d) onset of headache under stress. Knowledge of cardiac cephalgia is scarce, due to its rare clinical occurrence and to the scant importance given to headache as a symptom concomitantly with an ischaemic cardiac event.
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spelling pubmed-34517602012-11-29 Cardiac cephalgia Bini, Annamaria Evangelista, Andrea Castellini, Paola Lambru, Giorgio Ferrante, Tullia Manzoni, Gian Camillo Torelli, Paola J Headache Pain Review The purpose of this review was to provide a critical evaluation of medical literature on so-called “cardiac cephalgia” or “cardiac cephalalgia”. The 2004 International Classification of Headache Disorders codes cardiac cephalgia to 10.6 in the group of secondary headaches attributed to disorder of homoeostasis. This headache is hardly recognizable and is associated to an ischaemic cardiovascular event, of which it may be the only manifestation in 27% of cases. It usually occurs after exertion. Sometimes routine examinations, cardiac enzymes, ECG and even exercise stress test prove negative. In such cases, only a coronary angiogram can provide sufficient evidence for diagnosis. Cardiac cephalgia manifests itself without a specific pattern of clinical features: indeed, in this headache subtype there is a high variability of clinical manifestations between different patients and also within the same patient. It “mimics” sometimes a form of migraine either accompanied or not by autonomic symptoms, sometimes a form of tension-type headache; on other occasions, it exhibits characteristics that can hardly be interpreted as typical of primary headache. Pain location is highly variable. When the headache occurs as the only manifestation of an acute coronary event, the clues for suspicion are a) older age at onset, b) no past medical history of headache, c) presence of risk factors for vascular disorders and d) onset of headache under stress. Knowledge of cardiac cephalgia is scarce, due to its rare clinical occurrence and to the scant importance given to headache as a symptom concomitantly with an ischaemic cardiac event. Springer Milan 2009-01-13 2009-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3451760/ /pubmed/19139804 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0087-x Text en © Springer-Verlag 2009
spellingShingle Review
Bini, Annamaria
Evangelista, Andrea
Castellini, Paola
Lambru, Giorgio
Ferrante, Tullia
Manzoni, Gian Camillo
Torelli, Paola
Cardiac cephalgia
title Cardiac cephalgia
title_full Cardiac cephalgia
title_fullStr Cardiac cephalgia
title_full_unstemmed Cardiac cephalgia
title_short Cardiac cephalgia
title_sort cardiac cephalgia
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3451760/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19139804
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0087-x
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