Ice Cream Headache ‐ Site, Duration, and Relationship to Migraine
作者:
Nigel Bird,
Anne MacGregor,
Marcia I. R Wilkinson,
期刊:
Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain
(WILEY Available online 1992)
卷期:
Volume 32,
issue 1
页码: 35-38
ISSN:0017-8748
年代: 1992
DOI:10.1111/j.1526-4610.1992.hed3201035.x
出版商: Blackwell Science Inc
关键词: cold induced headache;ice cream headache;cold induced toothach
数据来源: WILEY
摘要:
SYNOPSISObjective ‐ To examine the characteristics of cold‐induced headaches in a group of migraine patients, to compare these with their usual migraine headache and with cold‐induced headache in s control population.Design ‐ Subjects completed a structured questionnaire recording previous headache history along with the characteristics of any headache produced during supervised palatal and pharyngeal application of ice cream.Subjects ‐ 70 consecutive patients attending the City of London Migraine Clinic, and 50 pre‐clinical medical and dental student volunteers from Queen Mary and Westfield College.Results ‐ 27% of the migraine patients and 40% of the students reported previous ice cream headaches. 17% of the migraine patients and 46% of the students developed headache following palatal application or a swallow of ice cream.Typically the headache was of early onset (x = 12.5s) and short duration (x = 21s), with a tendency for anterior headache on the same side as a palatal stimulus, and bilateral headache following an ice cream swallow. However, a significant minority experienced a previously unreported headache of late onset (x = 102s) and long duration (x = 236s) which tended to occur particularly after swallowing ice cream and to be less wall localised to the side of the cold stimulus.Ice cream appeared not to be a common trigger for migraine, and there was no significant correlation between site of ice cream headache and usual site of migraine.Conclusions ‐ These findings confirm that cold stimulation of the palate or pharynx commonly produces a headache. In contrast to previous studies, our results suggest that the 'ice cream headache' is less common in migraine patients than the general population. A similar pattern of headache was produced in both migraine patients and controls, and apart from the few for whom an ice cream headache may trigger a migraine, the ice cream headache seems not to have any special significance for mi
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