A headache is often present in patients with epilepsy. If the headache occurs in the vicinity of a seizure, it is defined as peri-ictal headache, which can occur either before (pre-ictal) or after (post-ictal) the seizure, to which the term ictal refers. An ictal headache [1] itself may or may not be an epileptic manifestation. In the first case, it is defined as ictal epileptic headache [2] or simply epileptic headache.[3] It is a type of pain seizure that can remain isolated or be followed by other manifestations of the seizure.[3] On the other hand, a ictal non-epileptic headache is a headache that occurs during a seizure but it is not due to an epileptic mechanism. When the headache does not occur in the vicinity of a seizure, it is defined as inter-ictal headache. In the case it's a disorder separate from epilepsy, it's a comorbidity.

Ictal headache (Headache and Epilepsy)
SpecialtyNeurology

Definitions

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Pre-ictal headache.

The most frequent cause of a pre-ictal headache is that of a seizure occurring during or within one hour after an attack of migraine with aura, defined Migraine aura-triggered seizure [4] or Migralepsy. However, the condition can also occur in connection with an attack of migraine without aura or of a non-migrainous headache.[5] Only an EEG during the headache can determine whether it is a true migraine or an epileptic headache (in this second case epileptiform anomalies are detectable during the headache phase).[citation needed]

Post-ictal headache.

It is a headache “occurring within three hours after an epileptic seizure and remitting spontaneously within 72 hours after seizure termination”.[4] It is one of the possible symptoms of the postictal state. Post-ictal headache is the most frequent association between headache and epilepsy, occurring between 12% and 52% of people with epilepsy.[6] Post-ictal headache has migrainous features in about half of the cases. It is more frequent after generalized tonic-clonic seizures, in temporal and occipital lobe epilepsy and in those with inter-ictal headache.[citation needed]

Inter-ictal headache.

Patients with epilepsy may also experience any type of headache, having its occurrence independent of the epileptic seizures, although occasionally near it (after or before). This is a comorbid condition, to be kept separate from the above-reported peri-ictal and ictal headaches.[5]

Ictal headache

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1. Ictal epileptic headache (IEH) [2][4] or, more simply, Epileptic headache (EH, since the term "ictal" is pleonastic, as a headache manifestation of an epileptic seizure is by definition ictal).[3] This is a rare form of a pain seizure.[3][7] EH may be the initial phase (so-called aura, necessarily with awareness) of an epileptic seizure, which then continues with other manifestations, for example convulsions. But EH is of greater clinical importance when it is an isolated event ("pure EH" [8]), i.e. not followed by other manifestations that clarify its epileptic nature.

Symptoms and diagnosis. EH has no clinical elements allowing a diagnosis. The characteristics and location of the pain in EH can be different: sometimes migraine-like with or without aura, sometimes tension-type, sometimes indefinable. The duration of an episode of EH may last for seconds, or for days (headache/status epilepticus[9]).

For the diagnosis it is necessary to perform an EEG during the headache that shows epilepsy-compatible discharges coinciding with the onset and cessation of the headache.

The so-called hemicrania epileptica is a variant of EH characterized by the fact that head pain and EEG paroxysms are located on the same side.

MRI is necessary to establish the cause, which, as in all focal epilepsies, can be varied: malformations/dysplasia, neoplasms, encephalopathies, traumatic brain injury, vasculopathies.[3]

Therapy. It depends on the etiology. During the headache, like most seizures, i.v. benzodiazepines are usually effective. Antiepileptic drugs can be used as preventive.

2. Ictal non-epileptic headache. Rare cases are reported.[10] It is a condition that can be differentiated with certainty from the previous one if the headache episode is also present outside the seizure, that is, before and/or after, without specific EEG abnormalities.[5]

References

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  1. ^ Piccioli M, Parisi P, Tisei P, Villa MP, Buttinelli C, Kasteleijn-Nolst Trenité DG (February 2009). "Ictal headache and visual sensitivity". Cephalalgia. 29 (2): 194–203. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2982.2008.01707.x. PMID 18823360. S2CID 7911641.
  2. ^ a b Parisi P, Verrotti A, Costa P, Striano P, Zanus C, Carrozzi M, Raucci U, Villa MP, Belcastro V (September 2015). "Diagnostic criteria currently proposed for "ictal epileptic headache": perspectives on strengths, weaknesses and pitfalls". Seizure. 31 (2): 56–63. doi:10.1016/j.seizure.2015.07.005. PMID 26362378. S2CID 18739241.
  3. ^ a b c d e Cianchetti C, Dainese F, Ledda MG, Avanzini G (November 2017). "Epileptic headache: a rare form of painful seizure". Seizure. 52: 169–175. doi:10.1016/j.seizure.2017.10.010. PMID 29054038.
  4. ^ a b c Headache Classification Committee of the International Headache Society (IHS) (January 2018). "The International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition". Cephalalgia. 38 (1): 1–211. doi:10.1177/0333102417738202. PMID 29368949. S2CID 45901670.
  5. ^ a b c Cianchetti C, Avanzini G, Dainese F, Guidetti V (June 2017). "The complex interrelations between two paroxysmal disorders: headache and epilepsy". Neurological Sciences. 38 (6): 941–948. doi:10.1007/s10072-017-2926-5. PMID 28341968. S2CID 4228459.
  6. ^ Ekstein D, Schachter SC (October 2010). "Postictal headache". Epilepsy & Behavior. 19 (2): 151–155. doi:10.1016/j.yebeh.2010.06.023. PMID 20829119. S2CID 44473900.
  7. ^ Hwang ST, Goodman T, Stevens SJ (September 2019). "Painful seizures: a review of epileptic ictal pain". Curr. Pain Headache Rep. 23 (11): 169–175. doi:10.1007/s11916-019-0825-6. PMID 31506775. S2CID 202160283.
  8. ^ Cianchetti C, Pruna D, Porcu L, Peltz MT, Ledda MG (March 2013). "Pure epileptic headache and related manifestations: a video-EEG report and discussion of terminology". Epileptic Disorders. 15 (1): 84–92. doi:10.1684/epd.2013.0552. PMID 23518661.
  9. ^ Belcastro V, Striano P, Pierguidi L, Calabresi P, Tambasco N (January 2011). "Ictal epileptic headache mimicking status migrainosus: EEG and DWI-MRI findings". Headache. 51 (1): 160–162. doi:10.1111/j.1526-4610.2010.01709.x. PMID 20553328. S2CID 24924404.
  10. ^ Mainieri G, Cevoli S, Giannini G, Zummo L, Leta C, Broli M, Ferri L, Santucci M, Posar A, Avoni P, Cortelli P, Tinuper P, Bisulli F (August 2015). "Headache in epilepsy: prevalence and clinical features". J. Headache Pain. 16: 556. doi:10.1186/s10194-015-0556-y. PMC 4540713. PMID 26245188.
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