Cargando…

Headaches precipitated by cough, prolonged exercise or sexual activity: a prospective etiological and clinical study

Headaches provoked by cough, prolonged physical exercise and sexual activity have not been studied prospectively, clinically and neuroradiologically. Our aim was to delimitate characteristics, etiology, response to treatment and neuroradiological diagnostic protocol of those patients who consult to...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pascual, Julio, González-Mandly, Andrés, Martín, Rubén, Oterino, Agustín
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Milan 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3452197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18751938
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0063-5
_version_ 1782244449014775808
author Pascual, Julio
González-Mandly, Andrés
Martín, Rubén
Oterino, Agustín
author_facet Pascual, Julio
González-Mandly, Andrés
Martín, Rubén
Oterino, Agustín
author_sort Pascual, Julio
collection PubMed
description Headaches provoked by cough, prolonged physical exercise and sexual activity have not been studied prospectively, clinically and neuroradiologically. Our aim was to delimitate characteristics, etiology, response to treatment and neuroradiological diagnostic protocol of those patients who consult to a general Neurological Department because of provoked headache. Those patients who consulted due to provoked headaches between 1996 and 2006 were interviewed in depth and followed-up for at least 1 year. Neuroradiological protocol included cranio-cervical MRI for all patients with cough headache and dynamic cerebrospinal functional MRI in secondary cough headache cases. In patients with headache provoked by prolonged physical exercise or/and sexual activity cranial neuroimaging (CT and/or MRI) was performed and, in case of suspicion of subarachnoid bleeding, angioMRI and/or lumbar tap were carried out. A total of 6,412 patients consulted due to headache during the 10 years of the study. The number of patients who had consulted due to any of these headaches is 97 (1.5% of all headaches). Diagnostic distribution was as follows: 68 patients (70.1%) consulted due to cough headache, 11 (11.3%) due to exertional headache and 18 (18.6%) due to sexual headache. A total of 28 patients (41.2%) out of 68 were diagnosed of primary cough headache, while the remaining 40 (58.8%) had secondary cough headache, always due to structural lesions in the posterior fossa, which in most cases was a Chiari type I malformation. In seven patients, cough headache was precipitated by treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. As compared to the primary variety, secondary cough headache began earlier (average 40 vs. 60 years old), was located posteriorly, lasted longer (5 years vs. 11 months), was associated with posterior fossa symptoms/signs and did not respond to indomethacin. All those patients showed difficulties in the cerebrospinal fluid circulation in the foramen magnum region in the dynamic MRI study and preoperative plateau waves, which disappeared after posterior fossa reconstruction. The mean age at onset for primary headaches provoked by physical exercise and sexual activity began at the same age (40 years old), shared clinical characteristics (bilateral, pulsating) and responded to beta-blockers. Contrary to cough headache, secondary cases are rare and the most frequent etiology was subarachnoid bleeding. In conclusion, these conditions account for a low proportion of headache consultations. These data show the total separation between cough headache versus headache due to physical exercise and sexual activity, confirm that these two latter headaches are clinical variants of the same entity and illustrate the clinical differences between the primary and secondary provoked headaches.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3452197
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher Springer Milan
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-34521972012-11-29 Headaches precipitated by cough, prolonged exercise or sexual activity: a prospective etiological and clinical study Pascual, Julio González-Mandly, Andrés Martín, Rubén Oterino, Agustín J Headache Pain Enrico Greppi Award 2008 Headaches provoked by cough, prolonged physical exercise and sexual activity have not been studied prospectively, clinically and neuroradiologically. Our aim was to delimitate characteristics, etiology, response to treatment and neuroradiological diagnostic protocol of those patients who consult to a general Neurological Department because of provoked headache. Those patients who consulted due to provoked headaches between 1996 and 2006 were interviewed in depth and followed-up for at least 1 year. Neuroradiological protocol included cranio-cervical MRI for all patients with cough headache and dynamic cerebrospinal functional MRI in secondary cough headache cases. In patients with headache provoked by prolonged physical exercise or/and sexual activity cranial neuroimaging (CT and/or MRI) was performed and, in case of suspicion of subarachnoid bleeding, angioMRI and/or lumbar tap were carried out. A total of 6,412 patients consulted due to headache during the 10 years of the study. The number of patients who had consulted due to any of these headaches is 97 (1.5% of all headaches). Diagnostic distribution was as follows: 68 patients (70.1%) consulted due to cough headache, 11 (11.3%) due to exertional headache and 18 (18.6%) due to sexual headache. A total of 28 patients (41.2%) out of 68 were diagnosed of primary cough headache, while the remaining 40 (58.8%) had secondary cough headache, always due to structural lesions in the posterior fossa, which in most cases was a Chiari type I malformation. In seven patients, cough headache was precipitated by treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. As compared to the primary variety, secondary cough headache began earlier (average 40 vs. 60 years old), was located posteriorly, lasted longer (5 years vs. 11 months), was associated with posterior fossa symptoms/signs and did not respond to indomethacin. All those patients showed difficulties in the cerebrospinal fluid circulation in the foramen magnum region in the dynamic MRI study and preoperative plateau waves, which disappeared after posterior fossa reconstruction. The mean age at onset for primary headaches provoked by physical exercise and sexual activity began at the same age (40 years old), shared clinical characteristics (bilateral, pulsating) and responded to beta-blockers. Contrary to cough headache, secondary cases are rare and the most frequent etiology was subarachnoid bleeding. In conclusion, these conditions account for a low proportion of headache consultations. These data show the total separation between cough headache versus headache due to physical exercise and sexual activity, confirm that these two latter headaches are clinical variants of the same entity and illustrate the clinical differences between the primary and secondary provoked headaches. Springer Milan 2008-08-28 2008-10 /pmc/articles/PMC3452197/ /pubmed/18751938 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0063-5 Text en © Springer-Verlag 2008
spellingShingle Enrico Greppi Award 2008
Pascual, Julio
González-Mandly, Andrés
Martín, Rubén
Oterino, Agustín
Headaches precipitated by cough, prolonged exercise or sexual activity: a prospective etiological and clinical study
title Headaches precipitated by cough, prolonged exercise or sexual activity: a prospective etiological and clinical study
title_full Headaches precipitated by cough, prolonged exercise or sexual activity: a prospective etiological and clinical study
title_fullStr Headaches precipitated by cough, prolonged exercise or sexual activity: a prospective etiological and clinical study
title_full_unstemmed Headaches precipitated by cough, prolonged exercise or sexual activity: a prospective etiological and clinical study
title_short Headaches precipitated by cough, prolonged exercise or sexual activity: a prospective etiological and clinical study
title_sort headaches precipitated by cough, prolonged exercise or sexual activity: a prospective etiological and clinical study
topic Enrico Greppi Award 2008
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3452197/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18751938
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10194-008-0063-5
work_keys_str_mv AT pascualjulio headachesprecipitatedbycoughprolongedexerciseorsexualactivityaprospectiveetiologicalandclinicalstudy
AT gonzalezmandlyandres headachesprecipitatedbycoughprolongedexerciseorsexualactivityaprospectiveetiologicalandclinicalstudy
AT martinruben headachesprecipitatedbycoughprolongedexerciseorsexualactivityaprospectiveetiologicalandclinicalstudy
AT oterinoagustin headachesprecipitatedbycoughprolongedexerciseorsexualactivityaprospectiveetiologicalandclinicalstudy