دورية أكاديمية

Cluster-Tic Syndrome: A Cross-Sectional Study of Cluster Headache Patients.

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Cluster-Tic Syndrome: A Cross-Sectional Study of Cluster Headache Patients.
المؤلفون: Wilbrink, Leopoldine A., Weller, Claudia M., Cheung, Carlo, Haan, Joost, Ferrari, Michel D.
المصدر: Headache: The Journal of Head & Face Pain; Sep2013, Vol. 53 Issue 8, p1334-1340, 7p
مصطلحات موضوعية: HEADACHE, INTERVIEWING, MAGNETIC resonance imaging, RESEARCH methodology, PATHOLOGICAL physiology, QUESTIONNAIRES, RESEARCH funding, TELEPHONES, TIC disorders, TRIGEMINAL neuralgia, COMORBIDITY, CROSS-sectional method, DESCRIPTIVE statistics
مستخلص: Objective To determine the prevalence and nature of trigeminal neuralgia in a large group of cluster headache patients. Background Cluster-tic syndrome is a rare headache syndrome in which trigeminal neuralgia and cluster headache co-occur. The existence of cluster-tic syndrome as a separate entity is questioned, and figures on prevalence of simultaneous existence of cluster headache and trigeminal neuralgia are not available. Methods As part of a nationwide study on headache mechanisms in cluster headache (Leiden University Medical Centre Cluster headache Neuro Analysis programme), we collected clinical data of 244 cluster headache patients using a semistructured telephone interview in a cross-sectional design. Results In 11 (4.5%) cluster headache patients, attacks fulfilling International Headache Society criteria for trigeminal neuralgia were also present. In all cases, trigeminal neuralgia occurred ipsilateral to cluster headache and in the majority (82%) in the ophthalmic branch. In 8 of these 11 patients (73%), the frequency and time pattern of trigeminal neuralgia seemed to parallel cluster headache and was likely a part of the cluster headache spectrum. In the 3 remaining patients, cluster headache and trigeminal neuralgia were unrelated in time and appeared to occur independently. Conclusion Trigeminal neuralgia co-occurred in 11/244 (4.5%) of cluster headache patients. In only 3 (1.2%) patients, trigeminal neuralgia seemed to occur independently from cluster headache episodes. Trigeminal neuralgia (-like) attacks in cluster headache patients are most of the time part of the cluster headache spectrum and should then probably not be treated separately. A shared underlying pathophysiological mechanism of cluster headache and trigeminal neuralgia is not supported by this study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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قاعدة البيانات: Complementary Index
الوصف
تدمد:00178748
DOI:10.1111/head.12161