Disclaimer:
This website is intended to assist with patient education and should not be used as a diagnostic, treatment or prescription service, forum or platform. Always consult your own healthcare practitioner for a more personalised and detailed opinion
We have selected the following expert medical opinion based on its clarity, reliability and accuracy. Credits: Sourced from the website Patient UK, authored by Dr Colin Tidy (see below), reviewed by Dr Helen Huins. Please refer to your own medical practitioner for a final perspective, assessment or evaluation.
Cluster headaches occur as attacks of severe, one-sided headaches. Typically, a number of attacks occur over several weeks - a bout (cluster) of attacks.
Cluster headaches affect about 1 in 1,000 people. They are four times more likely to occur in men than in women. The first bout (cluster) typically develops between the ages of 20-40 years, but it can start at any age.
Cluster headaches consist of attacks of severe one-sided pain in the head. It is sometimes called migrainous neuralgia. Each attack develops suddenly, usually without any warning. Typically, you feel the pain mainly in or around one eye or temple. The pain may spread to other areas on the same side of the head. The pain is sometimes described as burning or boring. One attack lasts 15-180 minutes, but most commonly 45-90 minutes. Attacks may occur from once every two days to eight times a day.
The pain during an attack is usually severe. It can be so severe that you become agitated and unable to lie down. Some people even bang their head against the wall in frustration with the pain. Attacks often occur at night, a couple of hours after falling asleep, and will wake you from sleep.
During each attack you may also experience other symptoms. These include:
Attacks usually occur in bouts (clusters). That is, a number of attacks of pain occur over a period of time, which then stop. During a cluster, each attack of pain usually occurs on the same side of the head. Each cluster of attacks usually lasts for several weeks or months. Each cluster is then usually separated by months or years of remission (where no attacks occur). However, the frequency of clusters can vary greatly from person to person.
For example:
Research suggests that a part of the brain called the hypothalamus becomes overactive during each attack, although it is not known what causes this to happen. During an attack, the hypothalamus is thought to release chemicals (neurotransmitters). These may stimulate nerve cells in the brain to cause the pain and other symptoms. The nerve overactivity may also cause a widening or opening up (vasodilation) of the blood vessels in the affected side of the brain. One theory is that the pain is caused by the widening of these blood vessels which then press on nearby tissues in the brain, which can cause pain. However, this is just a theory and the exact cause of the pain is not known.
The hypothalamus is a part of the brain thought to be concerned with the body clock (circadian rhythms). This may be linked to the fact that many people with cluster headaches have their bouts (clusters) at the same time each year, and each headache attack often occurs at about the same time each day.
Most cluster headaches occur for no apparent reason. However, some people find that something may trigger a headache. If you find that something triggers a headache, it is best to avoid it for the duration of a cluster period (until you are in remission).
For example:
Almost all people with cluster headaches have no abnormality of the brain that can be shown by scans or tests. In about 1 in 20 people there is another family member who also has cluster headaches. In a very small minority of cases, cluster headaches seem to be triggered by a tumour in the pituitary gland (pituitary adenoma) or other brain tumours. (The pituitary is a small gland at the base of the brain.) It has to be stressed that this is a rare cause of cluster headaches.
The diagnosis is based on the typical symptoms. There is no test that can prove the diagnosis. Tests are sometimes done if the diagnosis is not clear, to rule out other causes of headache. Sometimes tests such as a brain scan may be done to rule out a pituitary adenoma (as described above). Your GP may therefore refer you to a doctor with a special interest in the treatment of headaches.
Treatment is divided into treatments to stop (relieve) each headache, and treatments aimed at preventing the headaches.
Ordinary painkillers do not work. Generally, if you take an ordinary painkiller, it takes too long to work, as the headache will usually have gone before the painkiller takes effect.
Sumatriptan injection: sumatriptan, given by injection just under the skin, is the commonly used treatment to abort a headache. It relieves pain within 15 minutes in about three in four people with a cluster headache. You can be shown how to use this injection, and should use it as soon as a headache occurs.
Sumatriptan is a class of medicine called a triptan, more usually used to treat migraine. It is not a painkiller. Triptans work by interfering with a brain chemical called 5-HT. This chemical is thought to be involved in both migraine and cluster headaches.
Useful facts about sumatriptan injection:
Zolmitriptan nasal spray: zolmitriptan is also a triptan medicine. Zolmitriptan nasal spray is an alternative to sumatriptan injection. It often works well but possibly not as quickly as sumatriptan injection.
100% oxygen therapy: this is an alternative treatment that may be advised, especially if sumatriptan injections or zolmitriptan nasal spray cannot be used, or do not work. It often works well to relieve pain within 15 minutes, but it does not work in everybody. Its advantage, when it works, is that it can be used as often as necessary. The oxygen has to be 100% and so needs to be delivered, through a special mask, from an oxygen cylinder. Some people with cluster headaches have an oxygen cylinder and mask at home ready to treat an attack.
100% oxygen treatment may not be suitable for people who also have chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Other treatments: sumatriptan injections, zolmitriptan nasal spray or oxygen are usually the first-line treatments. Other treatments that are sometimes used include sumatriptan nasal spray and ergotamine injection. In general, these are often not as good as the first-line treatments.
It is sometimes difficult for doctors to rule out another type of headache called paroxysmal hemicrania. This is a rare condition of unknown cause which causes one-sided headaches similar to cluster headaches. Sometimes a doctor will prescribe a one-week trial of an anti-inflammatory painkilling medicine called indometacin. This will almost always take away the pain of paroxysmal hemicrania, but will have no effect on cluster headaches.
Some medicines are used in an attempt to prevent cluster headaches. Most people with cluster headaches will be prescribed one. It is difficult to say exactly how well they work at reducing the frequency and/or severity of headaches. This is because there is a lack of large research trials which have studied these treatments. However, smaller research studies suggest that they do work for many people.
The usual treatments to be used in this way are:
There have been anecdotal suggestions that alternative therapies such as acupuncture can be helpful in the treatment and prevention of cluster headache but as yet there is no good-quality supporting evidence for this. Further research may be helpful in this area.
Dr Colin Tidy
MBBS, MRCGP, MRCP, DCH
Dr Colin Tidy qualified as a doctor in 1983 and he has been writing for Patient since 2004. Dr Tidy has 25 years’ experience as a General Practitioner. He now works as a GP in Oxfordshire, with a special interest in teaching doctors and nurses, as well as medical students. In addition to writing many leaflets and articles for Patient, Dr Tidy has also contributed to medical journals and written a number of educational articles for General Practitioner magazines.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
If so, we invite you to criticise, contribute to or help improve our content. We find that many practicing doctors who regularly communicate with patients develop novel and often highly effective ways to convey complex medical information in a simplified, accurate and compassionate manner.
MedSquirrel is a shared knowledge, collective intelligence digital platform developed to share medical expertise between doctors and patients. We support collaboration, as opposed to competition, between all members of the healthcare profession and are striving towards the provision of peer reviewed, accurate and simplified medical information to patients. Please share your unique communication style, experience and insights with a wider audience of patients, as well as your colleagues, by contributing to our digital platform.
Your contribution will be credited to you and your name, practice and field of interest will be made visible to the world. (Contact us via the orange feed-back button on the right).