Handbook of clinical neurology
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Historical Article
Chapter 48: history of neurology in Australia and New Zealand.
In comparison with most Western countries, neurology as a recognized medical specialty has a relatively brief history in Australia: the national body for neurologists, the Australian (since 2006: and New Zealand) Association of Neurologists, was founded only in 1950. The development of neurology in both countries was heavily influenced by British neurology, and until recently a period in the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queen Square, London was regarded as essential to specialist training in neurology. ⋯ The first Australian physician to unambiguously commit himself to neurology was Alfred Walter Campbell (1868-1938), a remarkable personality who established an imposing reputation as neurocytologist and neuropathologist. The chapter provides a concise overview of the development of neurology as a clinical and academic specialty in Australia and New Zealand.
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A proportion of chronic headache patients become refractory to medical treatment and severely disabled. In such patients various neurostimulation methods have been proposed, ranging from invasive procedures such as deep-brain stimulation to minimally invasive ones like occipital nerve stimulation. They have been applied in single cases or small series of patients affected with varying headache disorders: cervicogenic headache, hemicrania continua, posttraumatic headache, chronic migraine, and cluster headache. ⋯ At this stage, it should be preferred as first-line invasive therapy for iCCH. Recent case reports mention the efficacy of supraorbital (SNS) and vagal (VNS) nerve stimulation. Whether these neurostimulation methods have a place in the management of iCCH patients remains to be determined.
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Activity-related headaches can be brought on by Valsalva maneuvers ("cough headache"), prolonged exercise ("exertional headache"), and sexual excitation ("orgasmic headache"). These headaches account for 1-2% of the consultations due to headache in a general neurological department. These entities are a challenging diagnostic problem as they can be primary or secondary and as their etiologies differ depending on the headache type. ⋯ The mean age at onset for primary headaches provoked by physical exercise and sexual activity is similar (40 years); they share clinical characteristics (bilateral, pulsating) and respond to beta-blockers. In conclusion, provoked headaches account for a low proportion of headache consultations. Cough headache is a different condition when compared to headache due to physical exercise and sexual activity, which are clinical variants of the same entity.