Cephalalgia : an international journal of headache
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Case Reports
Orbital pain as an isolated sign of internal carotid artery dissection. A diagnostic pitfall.
Head pain is one of the main presenting symptoms of internal carotid artery (ICA) dissection, usually in association with ischemic and/or local signs such as Horner's syndrome, lower cranial nerve palsies, or tinnitus. In rare cases, head pain remains isolated and mimics other conditions. We report a patient who suffered isolated prolonged orbital pain as the only sign of intrapetrous ICA dissection. Early recognition of such unusual facial pain may be crucial in decreasing the risk of secondary cerebral or retinal ischemia.
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Migraine headaches usually decrease in frequency and severity and often cease during advancing age. Occasionally, migraineurs report late-life migrainous accompaniments, i.e., auras without headache, particularly when typical migraine attacks terminate or diminish following major or minor strokes, at which time the auras may become atypical. Clinical observations such as these suggest that degenerative cerebrovascular changes accompanying aging may modify the course of migraine headaches particularly those with aura. ⋯ Global CBF increases after Diamox in Group B (with persistent and severe migraine), were significantly greater compared with normals without headache, and with Group C consisting of migraineurs whose headaches had decreased, subsided, or become replaced by late-life migrainous accompaniments (Group C). Results establish that cerebrovasodilator capacitance declines with advancing age, probably due to progressive cerebral atherosclerosis, since these declines were accentuated by risk factors for stroke, particularly TIAs or documented lacunar infarcts by CT. Progressive impairments of cerebral vasodilator capacitance among migraineurs were associated with: (i) reductions in frequency and severity of migrainous cephalalgia and (ii) appearance of late-life migrainous accompaniments.