Cluster headaches are rare, extremely painful and debilitating headaches that occur in groups or clusters.
Cluster headaches are frequently associated with drooping eyelids, conjunctival injection (which results in red, watery eyes), tearing, constricted pupil, eyelid edema, nasal congestion, runny nose, and sweating on the affected side of the face. The neck is often stiff or tender in association with cluster headaches afterwards, and jaw and teeth pain are sometimes reported.
The location and type of pain has sometimes been compared to a "brain-freeze" headache casued from rapidly drinking or eating something very cold, also known as an "Ice Cream Headache,"; this analogy is limited, but may offer some insight into the cluster headache experience. Persons who have experienced both cluster headaches and other painful conditions (childbirth, migraines) report that the pain of cluster headaches is far worse, sometimes 100 times more severe than a migraine *. One analogy is that of a burning ice pick being repeatedly stabbed through the eye into the brain. It has been reported as the most severe pain known to medical science, worse than amputation without anesthetics.
During an attack, the person is restless and cannot sit still and may pace or even become severely agitated. Sensitivity to light is more typical of a migraine, as is vomiting, but both can be present in some sufferers of cluster headache, although rare.
Cluster headaches are occasionally referred to as "alarm clock headaches", because of the regularity of its timining and its ability to wake a person from sleep. Thus it has been known to strike at the same time each night or at a certain period after falling asleep, or at precisely the same time during the day a week later. This has prompted researchers to speculate an involvement of the brains "biological clock" or circadian rhythm. Other synonyms for cluster headache include Horton's syndrome and "suicide headaches" (a reference to the excruciating pain and resulting desperation that has culiminated in actual suicide).
In episodic cluster headache, these attacks occur once or more daily, often at the same times each day, for a period of several weeks, followed by a headache-free period lasting weeks, months, or years. Approximately 10–15% of cluster headache sufferers are chronic; they can experience multiple headaches every day for years.
Cluster headaches are classified as vascular headaches. The intense pain is caused by the dilation of blood vessels which creates pressure on the trigeminal nerve. While this process is the immediate cause of the pain, the etiology (underlying cause or causes) is not fully understood.
The hypothalamus is responsive to light—daylength and photoperiod; olfactory stimuli, including pheromones; steroids, including sex steroids and corticosteroids, neurally transmitted information arising in particular from the heart, the stomach, and the reproductive system; autonomic inputs; blood-borne stimuli, including leptin, ghrelin, angiotensin, insulin, pituitary hormones, cytokines, blood plasma concentrations of glucose and osmolarity, etc.; and stress. These particular sensitivities may underly the causes, triggers, and methods of treatment of cluster headache.
Medically, cluster headaches are considered benign, but because of the extreme and often debilitating pain associated with them, a severe attack is nevertheless treated as a medical emergency by doctors who are familiar with the condition. Doctors who are less familiar with the disease may neglect sufferers in emergency rooms and force them to endure inordinate spans of time before receiving treatment, if any treatment at all is granted. Sometimes, sufferers of the disease may even be accused of drug-seeking behavior.
Over-the-counter pain medications (such as aspirin, paracetamol, and ibuprofen) have no effect on the pain from a cluster headache. Unlike other headaches such as migraines and tension headaches, cluster headaches do not respond to biofeedback.
Some have reported partial relief from narcotic pain killers, but the frequency of their use in a cluster cycle (1–8 or more times a day) often disqualifies them from use and they are mostly ineffective due to the intensity of the pain involved in cluster attacks. Anecdotal evidence indicates that cluster headaches can be so excruciating that even morphine does little to ease the pain. However, some newer medications like fentanyl have shown promise in early studies and use.
Medications to treat cluster headaches are classified as either abortives or prophylactics (preventatives). In addition, short-term transitional medications (such as steroids) may be used while prophylactic treatment is instituted and adjusted.
Cool showers have helped about 15% of people who try them, while not aborting the attack, they allow the body to cool and thus help to reduce the level of pain. Other abortive remedies that work for some and not for others include ice, hot showers, breathing cold air, caffeine, and drinking large amounts of water in the early stages of an attack. Vigorous exercise has been shown in some cases to be very effective in relieving and aborting an acute attack (this produces the same result as the oxygen therapy by increasing the levels of oxygen within the body).(Atkinson, 1977; Ekbom and Lindahl, 1970).
Magnesium supplements have been shown to be of some benefit in about 40% of patients. Melatonin has also been reported to help some. Feverfew, an herb used to treat migraine, is not clearly beneficial according to anecdotes from web forums. A large proportion of those trying kudzu Supplierhave reported supression of the symptoms.
There is substantial anecdotal evidence that serotonergic psychedelics such as psilocybin (mushrooms) and LSD and LSA d-Lysergic acid amide (Rivea corymbosa seeds) abort cluster periods and extend remission periods. *" target="_blank" > A clinical study of these treatments under the auspices of MAPS is being developed by researchers at Harvard Medical School, McLean Hospital. [http://www.maps.org/research/cluster/psilo-lsd/index.html Melatonin, psilocybin, serotonin, and the triptan abortive drugs are closely-related tryptamines.
There have been a few cases where a root canal treatment on a bad tooth made the headache disappear.
Ailments of unknown etiology | Headaches | Neurological disorders | Vascular disorders
Clusterkopfschmerz | Cefalea en racimos | Algie vasculaire de la face | Clusterhoofdpijn | Clusterhodepine
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"Cluster headache".
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