Title: Headache in Athletes
1Headache in Athletes
Kevin deWeber, MD Primary Care Sports Medicine
2Objectives
- Describe headache types see in athletes
- Outline characteristics of life-threatening
conditions that can cause headaches - Review treatments for headaches
- Highlight unique features in treatment of
headaches in athletes
3Prevalence of headache in athletes
- Up to 36 of athletes report moderate or severe
headaches - HAs may lead to
- limitation of activity (during acute treatment)
- apprehension --gt decreased performance
- treatment medicines --gt performance
4Broad categories ofHeadache in athletes
- Exercise-induced HA
- Non-exercise-induced HA
- There may be some overlap
- e.g. patient has migraines in off-season but gets
them more frequently during play
5Types of exercise-induced HA
- Exercise-induced HA due to underlying
conditions - Mass lesions
- Systemic conditions
- Medications
- HAs purely from exercise
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Weightlifters HA
- Acute effort migraine
- Benign exertional HA
6Mass lesion headache
- Usually starts mild and worsens slowly
- Occasionally associated with neuro deficit
- Risk factor HA that begins after age 50
- Risk factor HA located always in one spot
- May have symptoms of increase ICP
7Mass lesion Headache with increased
intracranial pressure
- Pain during cough, sneeze, strain, bending
forward, and/or sexual orgasm - Rapid onset usually bilateral but distribution
variable - Severe pain for a few minutes that fades to dull
ache lasting up to 24 hours - Up to 25 of patients with Valsalva-induced HA
intracranial structural lesion - CT or MRI indicated
8Headache with increased intracranial
pressureTreatment
- (after mass lesion is ruled out)
- Activity modification to whatever degree is
practical - Indomethacin 25-50 mg TID
- Other NSAIDs
9Exercise-induced headache from systemic conditions
- Hypoglycemia
- Hypertension
- Dehydration
- Sinus disease
- Hyperthermia
- Pheochromocytoma
- Cardiac ischemia (walk headache)
10Medication-relatedexercise-induced headache
- Thermogenic (weight loss) aids
- Anabolic steroids
- Stimulants
11Intracranial Hemorrhage
- Most common atraumatic cause in athletic
population is Subarachnoid Hemorrhage - Majority due to aneurysm
- Precipitating factor in athletics is elevated
blood pressure - Classic presentation explosive HA, neck
stiffness, photophobia, collapse - Worst headache Ive ever had
12Intracranial HemorrhageManagement
- Take athlete immediately to ED
- CT scan
- Neurosurgical referral
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14Weight Lifters Headache
- A variant of benign exertional HA
- In anaerobic activities involving straining
- Begins abruptly during or immediately following
the activity - Referred pain from ligaments and muscles in neck
- Usually posterior throbbing
- Lasts seconds to minutes
- May be followed by diffuse, dull HA for hours
15Weight Lifters HeadacheTreatment
- Analgesics, NSAIDs
- Massage
- Physical therapy modalities
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17Acute Effort Migraine
- Short periods of vigorous activity
- Cycling, sprinting, swimming, weightlifting
- Unilateral, severe, throbbing / pounding,
preceded by aura - Accompanied by nausea and vomiting
- Treatment same as non-exercise-induced migraine
(later discussion)
18Benign exertional headache
- Should be a diagnosis of exclusion
19Benign exertional headache
- Precipitated by any form of exercise
- Running, swimming, cycling, skiing most often
implicated - More common in men
- Develops after exercise is well underway
- Intensity builds as exercise continues
- Tends to be diffuse and throbbing
- Last up to 6 hours after cessation of exercise
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21Benign exertional headacheTreatment and
prevention
- Effectively treated with NSAIDs
- Naprosyn 250-500 mg
- Indomethacin 25-50 mg
- /- acetaminophen
- Prevented if meds given 30-60 minutes before
exercise
22Evaluation ofexercise-induced headache
- First objective is to rule out ominous etiologies
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage, cerebral aneurysm,
Arnold-Chiari malformation, neoplasm, CNS
infection
23Worrisome headache characteristics
- Abrupt, severe onset (thunderclap onset)
- Change in previously existing HA character
- Onset of HA after age 50
- HA associated with head/neck trauma
- Associated neurologic deficits or papilledema
- Nocturnal onset
24Worrisome headache characteristics (cont.)
- HA increases in severity with laying down
- HA is constant and progressive
- HA occurs exclusively in one region
- History of cancer or HIV infection
- Associated loss of consciousness or confusional
state
25Evaluation of the acute, severe headache
26Evaluation of worrisome HA
- Labs
- CBC, Chemistry, BUN/Cr, ESR
- Neuroimaging
- CT w/ contrast or MRI
- Consider MRA of intracranial vasculature
- Consider LP for CSF analysis
- Blood, cells, pressure, culture
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28Non-exercise-induced headaches in athletes
- Tension HA
- Migraine HA
- Mixed HA
- Cluster HA
- Cervical spine-related HA
- Altitude HA
- Divers HA
- Post-traumatic HA
29Tension headacheSymptoms
- Gradual onset, worsening as day progresses
- May begin focal becomes diffuse
- Band-like, pressure quality
- Constant may throb at peak intensity
- May have mild photophobia/phonophobia
- Worsened by exertion
- Mixed HA components of migraine and tension HA
together
30Tension headacheNon-Pharmacologic treatment
- Address contributing factors
- Stress, anxiety, depression
- Physical therapy for cervical stretching
- Biofeedback
- Stress management techniques
31Tension headachePharmacologic treatment
- Acetaminophen and NSAIDs effective in most
patients - Muscle relaxant if muscle tension a feature
- Isometheptine (Midrin) if mixed headache
- Instruct patients to avoid daily use
- Avoids analgesic withdrawal headache
32Chronic tension headache
- Definition more than 15 HA days a month
- Use prophylactic meds instead
- Nortriptyline - titrate up from 10 mg qHS
- May next try SSRI, bupropion, valproate
- Abortive meds only for intense headaches
33Migraine Headache
- Vascular etiology
- Spasm, dilation, inflammation
- Unilateral usually
- Throbbing usually
- Nausea/vomiting usually present
- Phono-/photophobia usually present
- Moderate to severe intensity
- Occasional aura or neuro signs
34Migraine headacheAbortive treatment
- Acetaminophen/NSAIDs work in a few
- Specific abortive meds needed in most
- Triptans (5-HT1 agonists)
- Ergotamine agents
- Combination meds (many)
- Antiemetics
- Butorphanol nasal spray
- See recent U.S. Headache Consortium recs
35Migraine headache Abortive treatment (cont.)
- Triptans are tx of choice in athletes if
unresponsive to analgesics - Less sedation than with most other meds
- Rapid onset
- Multiple options available
- Sumatriptan (SC, oral, nasal spray)
- Rizatriptan (oral)
- Zolmitriptan (oral)
- Naratriptan (oral)
36Migraine headache Abortive treatment (cont.)
- Side effects of Triptans
- Somnolence, atypical pain, dizziness
- Rest in quiet, dark room is helpful
- Repeat prn as indicated
- Return to play is possible if HA aborted
- Contra-indications
- CAD, uncontrolled HTN, Prinzmetals angina
37Migraine headacheAbortive treatment (cont.)
- Other meds effective but more side-effects
- Dihydroergotamine (nasal, SC, IV, IM)
- Nausea, vomiting, chest pain, tachycardia
- Prochlorperazine (IM, IV)
- Sedation, blurred vision, dizziness
- Combination meds (Fiorinal, Midrin)
- Sedation
- Opiates (butorphanol nasal)
- Sedation overuse risk
38Migraine headacheProphylaxis
- Indications
- More than 1-2 HAs/month
- HAs not responsive to abortive treatment
- HAs so severe that they are disabling
- Takes several weeks to see benefit
- Start at low dose (to avoid side effects) and
titrate up - 6 month trial before trying another agent
39Migraine headacheProphylactic meds with
relatively low side effect profiles for athletes
- Naproxen 500 mg QD
- Excellent choice if effective
- Vitamin B2 (riboflavin) 400 mg QD
- Some decent evidence of effectiveness
- Verapamil 240 mg QD
- Not very effective, but well-tolerated if it
works - Fluoxetine 20-40 mg QD
- Not very effective, but well-tolerated if it works
40Migraine headacheProphylactic meds with higher
side effect profiles but quite effective
- Nortriptaline - titrate up from 10 QHS
- Watch for sedation, blurred vision
- Beta-blockers - effective, BUT
- Banned by in many sports
- Exercise intolerance common
- Valproex, gabapentin, methysergide
- Effective, but use only if in a pinch due to side
effects
41Cluster headache
- Occur in clusters of 1-3 month duration, then
resolve months to years - Unilateral, retro-orbital or temporal usually
- Sharp, boring, constant pain usually
- Severe, disabling
- Duration 15 min - 3 hours
- Associated with ipsilateral lacrimation, nasal
congestion, conj. injection, rhinorrhea, facial
flushing, or sweating
42Cluster headacheTreatment
- Three types
- Abortive tx of acute HA
- Abortive management of episodic clusters
- Long-term prophylaxis
43Cluster headacheAbortive treatment of acute HA
- The sooner, the better
- Oral meds ineffective
- Effective meds
- High-flow O2
- Sumatriptan SC, nasal
- Dihydroergotamine SC, nasal
- Ergotamine sublingual
- Butorphanol nasal
44Cluster headacheAbortive tx of clusters
- Lessens frequency and/or severity of HA
- Administer as long as clusters last
- Effective meds
- Ergotamine (oral) or methysergide AND
- Prednisone 60-80 mg/day taper over 14 days after
HA frequency decreases
45Cluster headacheProphylaxis of clusters
- Verapamil quite effective
- Valproate
- Lithium carbonate
- Methysergide
- Propranolol
- Amitriptaline
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47Cervical Spine Headache
- Suboccipital and unilateral
- Mild to moderate in severity, nagging
- Features
- Pain on awakening, previous neck injury
- Exacerbated by neck movements (extension)
- Neck stiffness
- Treatment PT modalities
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49Altitude Headache
- Occurs at altitude gt2500 meters
in those not acclimatized - Component of Acute Mountain Sickness
- Severe -- High Altitude Cerebral Edema
- Throbbing, generalized
- Prevention acclimatization, gradual climb,
acetazolamide - Treatment descent or time
50Divers headache
- Multi-factorial
- Excessive gripping of mouthpiece
- Sinus barotrauma
- Tight goggles, helmet, mask
51Post-traumatic Headache types
- Intracranial bleed
- Chronic muscle contraction
- Tension-vascular
- Migraine (footballers)
- Dysautonomic cephalgia
- Post-concussion syndrome HA
- Local nerve entrapment
52Post-traumatic HeadacheChronic muscle
contraction
- May be component of Postconcussion Syndrome
- Treat as tension HA
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54Post-traumatic HeadacheFootballers migraine
- Caused by heading ball
- Seen in boxers and wrestlers after head impact
- Symptoms same as a migraine HA
- Abortive tx same as regular migraine
- Prophylactic meds not very successful
55Post-traumatic Headache Dysautonomic Cephalgia
- Cause damage to cervical sympathetic fibers in
the neck at the time of head injury - Occurs up to months after injury
- Severe, unilateral, fronto-temporal
- Ipsilateral pupil dilation, sweating, vision
changes - Treatment beta-blockers
56Post-traumatic Headache Local Nerve Entrapment
- Caused by fibrosis around nerve at site of
previous trauma - Localized to specific site of nerve
- Treatment may require surgical decompression
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58Posttraumatic HeadachePost-Concussion Syndrome
- HA as part of symptom complex
- Dizziness, tinnitus, diplopia, blurred vision,
irritability, anxiety, depression, fatigue, sleep
disturbance, poor appetite, poor memory, impaired
concentration, slowed reactions - HA is probably tension type
- Treat as with chronic tension HA
- Goes away with time (up to months)
59REVIEW
60Up to 10 of patients with exercise-induced
headaches have an intracranial mass lesion
61Evaluation ofexercise-induced headache
- First objective is to rule out ominous etiologies
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage, cerebral aneurysm,
Arnold-Chiari malformation, neoplasm, CNS
infection
62Worrisome headache characteristics
- Abrupt, severe onset (thunderclap onset)
- Change in previously existing HA character
- Onset of HA after age 50
- HA associated with head/neck trauma
- Associated neurologic deficits or papilledema
- Nocturnal onset
63Worrisome headache characteristics (cont.)
- HA increases in severity with laying down
- HA is constant and progressive
- HA occurs exclusively in one region
- History of cancer or HIV infection
- Associated loss of consciousness or confusional
state
64Benign exertional headache
- Should be a diagnosis of exclusion
65QUESTIONS?