Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology
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Patients with subarachnoid haemorrhage (SAH) frequently describe the occurrence of an underestimated or even ignored severe headache in the days or weeks preceding the bleeding. If recognised early, this warning headache might lead to specific investigations and, if indicated, a surgical approach might avoid a dramatic haemorrhagic event. In a recent and exhaustive systematic review, the incidence of a sentinel headache (SH) was evaluated in a range of 10-43% of SAH patients. ⋯ Nevertheless, a warning headache can precede a SAH in unruptured aneurysm even without a minor bleeding. Underestimation or misdiagnosis of SH depends on incorrect evaluation of the headache characteristics (unusual, severe, abrupt, thunderclap), overestimation of cranial CT sensitivity (false negative increasing over the elapsing time), failure to perform lumbar puncture (LP) in patients with negative CT, incorrect evaluation of CSF findings (xanthochromia may be absent in the first 12 h) and failure to differentiate traumatic tap from true SAH. Considering the diagnosis of SH in all cases of a severe, sudden-onset (thunderclap) headache, and performing all the appropriate diagnostic exams, including LP if necessary, could prevent subsequent massive bleeding and its invalidating or fatal consequences.
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Review
Dizziness and vertigo: an epidemiological survey and patient management in the emergency room.
Dizziness and vertigo are frequent causes of presentation at the emergency room, with an incidence in the Vimercate district, Italy, close to 3.5%. The basic management of the "dizzy" patients in the emergency room includes a detailed history and an accurate physical/neurological examination, with the aim to identify "at risk" patients who require further diagnostic procedures and/or immediate admission to the hospital.
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Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) occurs as a result of bleeding into the brain parenchyma and formation of a focal hematoma. Treatment for ICH is primarily supportive, and outcome remains poor. ⋯ Arterial blood pressure control is useful and requires adequate compliance to specific guidelines. Ultra-early hemostatic therapy may represent a promising tool to reduce early hematoma enlargement and to improve outcome.
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Clinicians long have suspected that symptomatic medications taken by those with headache can cause rebound or drug-induced headaches if overused. This problem has been considered in the classification of headache disorders made by the International Headache Society. ⋯ Sustained improvement following treatment for drug-induced headache can be difficult to achieve and at the moment there is no consensus on what approach may be more effective, in particular regarding outpatient or inpatient treatment withdrawal strategy. Clinical aspects and different therapeutic strategies for chronic daily headache patients with medication overuse are considered.
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Alternative causes of optic neuritis (ON), other than primary demyelination or non-demyelinating optic neuropathies which can mimic acute ON, should be rigorously considered if a patient with presumed ON does not follow the typical clinical course or has a normally appearing brain on magnetic resonance imaging. A thorough differential diagnosis includes viral and bacterial optic neuropathies, ischemic optic neuropathies, Devic's neuromyelitis optica, compressive or infiltrative optic neuropathies, Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy and toxic and deficiency optic neuropathies. All patients should undergo a complete neuroophthalmological examination to help exclude other diseases mimicking ON. Atypical clinical cases of optic neuropathy require further specific laboratory, neurophysiological and imaging tests to make a correct and early diagnosis.