• Pain Med · Oct 2021

    Can craniometry play a role in cluster headache diagnosis? A pilot exploratory TC-3D based study.

    • Antonio Russo, Marcello Silvestro, Laura Vanore, Raffaella Capasso, Mattia Siciliano, Alessandro Tessitore, Ferdinando Caranci, Gioacchino Tedeschi, and Renata Conforti.
    • Headache Center, Department of Advanced Medical and Surgical Sciences.
    • Pain Med. 2021 Oct 8; 22 (10): 2350-2355.

    BackgroundSince the pioneering reports of the so-called leonine face in cluster headache (CH) patients, cranial and facial features of these patients have been poorly investigated with conflicting results. We aimed to investigate whether abnormalities in craniometric measurements could characterize male CH patients and represent reliable and reproducible diagnostic biomarkers able to identify CH patients.MethodsBrain CT images were recorded between 2018 and 2020 in 24 male patients with CH and in 24 matched healthy controls (HC). Then, craniometric measurements were obtained, and logistic regression and receiver operating characteristic curves analyses were used to identify the craniometric abnormalities able to distinguish CH patients from HC.ResultsLogistic regression analyses showed that frontal bone height and facial width were able to discriminate, one independently from the other, CH patients from HC with an overall accuracy of 77%. The optimal cutoff score in detecting the probable presence of CH was 11.50 cm for frontal bone height and 13.30 cm for facial width.DiscussionIn the present study we found, for the first time by means of brain 3D computed tomography approach, abnormal craniometric measurements in CH patients when compared with HC. The absence of differences in smoke and alcohol intake suggests that the observed craniometric abnormalities may represent a specific feature of CH patients.ConclusionThe craniometric evaluation by means of brain 3D computed tomography could represent a widespread, noninvasive, and accurate tool to support CH diagnosis to avoid frequent misdiagnosis or delay in the diagnostic process.© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Pain Medicine.All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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