Characteristics of primary stabbing headache in a tertiary neurological clinic in China

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Abstract

Objectives: The aim of this study was to investigate the clinical characteristics of primary stabbing headache (PSH) and its prevalence in a neurology outpatient center at a university hospital in China. Methods: We surveyed patients via face-to-face interviews by physicians using a questionnaire for headache. Results: Of 1,219 participating patients with headache, 18 (1.5%) were diagnosed with PSH. The mean age was 44.1±15.5 years. The headaches were localized to a single fixed area in 61.1% of patients. The frontal cerebral regions were reported as most common areas. Fourteen patients (77.8%) suffered from moderate to severe intensity headache with a mean score of 4.3±1.9 on an 11-point pain scale. Of the patients, 27.8% had accompanying symptoms with photophobia/phonophobia as the most common complaint(s). Fifty percent of patients reported trigger factors, with weather change noted as a common trigger. Conclusion: PSH was shown to have an onset at middle age with moderate-to-severe intensity attacks localized predominantly within the first division of the trigeminal nerve. Accompanying phenomena and trigger factors were common and should be noted, implying further research to be conducted. © 2014 American Academy of Pain Medicine.

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Liang, X., Ying, G., Huang, Q., Wang, J., Li, N., Tan, G., … Zhou, J. (2014). Characteristics of primary stabbing headache in a tertiary neurological clinic in China. Pain Medicine (United States), 15(5), 871–875. https://doi.org/10.1111/pme.12361

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