Chronic daily headaches
DEFINITION
CAUSES
- Inflammation or other problems with the blood vessels in and around the brain, including stroke
- Infections, such as meningitis
- Intracranial pressure that’s either too high or too low
- Brain tumor
- Traumatic brain injury
- Medication overuse headache
- This type of headache usually develops in people who have an episodic headache disorder, usually migraine or tension-type, and take too much pain medication. If you’re taking pain medications — even over-the-counter analgesics — more than two days a week (or nine days a month), you’re at risk of developing rebound headaches
SYMPTOMS
- Chronic tension-type headache
- New daily persistent headache
- Hemicrania continua
- Affect one side or both sides of your head
- Have a pulsating, throbbing sensation
- Cause moderate to severe pain
- Are aggravated by routine physical activity
- Nausea, vomiting or both
- Sensitivity to light and sound
Chronic tension-type headache
- Affects both sides of your head
- Cause mild to moderate pain
- Cause pain that feels pressing or tightening, but not pulsating
- Aren’t aggravated by routine physical activity
- Some people may have skull tenderness.
- Usually affects both sides of your head
- Cause pain that feels like pressing or tightening, but not pulsating
- Cause mild to moderate pain
- Aren’t aggravated by routine physical activity
- Affect only one side of your head
- Are daily and continuous with no pain-free periods
- Cause moderate pain with spikes of severe pain
- Respond to the prescription pain reliever indomethacin (Indocin)
- May sometimes become severe with development of migraine-like symptoms
- Tearing or redness of the eye on the affected side
- Nasal congestion or runny nose
- Drooping eyelid or pupil narrowing
- Sensation of restlessness
- You usually have two or more headaches a week
- You take a pain reliever for your headaches most days
- You need more than the recommended dose of over-the-counter pain remedies to relieve your headaches
- Your headache pattern changes or your headaches worsen
- Your headaches are disabling
- Is sudden and severe
- Accompanies a fever, stiff neck, confusion, seizure, double vision, weakness, numbness or difficulty speaking
- Follows a head injury
- Gets worse despite rest and pain medication