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Case Reports Multicenter Study
Pain Paroxysms With Coronal Radiation: Case Series and Proposal of a New Variant of Epicrania Fugax.
- Javier Casas-Limón, María L Cuadrado, Marina Ruiz, Elena Martínez, Álvaro Gutiérrez-Viedma, Carlos M Ordás, and Ángel L Guerrero.
- From the Department of Neurology, Hospital Universitario Quirón Madrid, Pozuelo de Alarcón, Madrid, Spain.
- Headache. 2016 Jun 1; 56 (6): 1040-4.
ObjectiveWe aim to report 4 patients with brief pain paroxysms whose clinical features remind of typical epicrania fugax (EF), except for the direction along a transverse trajectory.BackgroundEF has been defined as a brief paroxysmal head pain, with stabbing quality, describing a linear or zig-zag trajectory across the surface of one hemicranium.MethodsWe considered all patients attending the headache outpatient office at 3 tertiary hospitals from March 2008 to December 2015. We identified a total of 4 cases with dynamic pain paroxysms moving in coronal direction.ResultsThe mean age at onset was 49 years (range 34-75). All the patients suffered a dynamic pain from parietal or temporal areas to the contralateral ones, crossing the midline in a linear or zig zag trajectory, the entire sequence lasting 2-3 seconds. No triggers were identified. One patient noticed mild interictal tenderness at the stemming point. The frequency of the attacks varied from 2 per week to 1 every 2 months. No underlying disorders were identified by physical and neurological exams and neuroimaging and laboratory tests.ConclusionsOur patients presented with a paroxysmal head pain that might correspond to a transverse variant of EF. These observations may not only expand the EF phenotype but also reinforce the distinction between EF and pericranial neuralgias.© 2016 American Headache Society.
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