Role of endoscopy in rhinogenic contact headache not responding to medical treatment

Abstract Objective To assess the role of various anatomical variation of the nose in the pathogenesis of contact point rhinogenic headache of noninfective or organic cause and to evaluate the role of endoscopic surgery with removal or correction of the anatomical variation that caused headache in th...

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Main Authors: Sayed M. S. Kadah, Sayed M. Mokhemar, Tawfik A. E. Alkholy, Taghreed M. M. Salem
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-08-01
Series:The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.4103/ejo.ejo_6_19
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spelling doaj-1a9c44d33cdb4f6c80a3c7c40c5c02b92021-04-02T12:39:53ZengSpringerOpenThe Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology1012-55742090-85392019-08-0135325626110.4103/ejo.ejo_6_19Role of endoscopy in rhinogenic contact headache not responding to medical treatmentSayed M. S. Kadah0Sayed M. Mokhemar1Tawfik A. E. Alkholy2Taghreed M. M. Salem3ENT Department, AL-Azhar UniversityENT Department, AL-Azhar UniversityENT Department, AL-Azhar UniversityENT Department, AL-Azhar UniversityAbstract Objective To assess the role of various anatomical variation of the nose in the pathogenesis of contact point rhinogenic headache of noninfective or organic cause and to evaluate the role of endoscopic surgery with removal or correction of the anatomical variation that caused headache in the management. Patients and methods This study included 30 patients with refractory or resistant headache for more than 1 year and diagnosed to have sinonasal anatomical variations. They were presented to the outpatient clinics of Al-Zahraa University Hospital in the period from May 2015 to May 2018. There ages ranged from 18 to 34 years. A total of 20 (66.7%) patients were males and 10 (33.3%) were females. Data from this group were analyzed retrospectively. Results Multiple anatomical variations were noted by endoscopy and computed tomographic scans in 30 patients. These variations included septum deviation in 30 (100%) patients followed by hypertrophied inferior turbinate in 15 (50%) patients then concha bullosa in 14 (46.7%) patients. In these 30 patients, 25 (83.3%) cases showed complete cure, three (10%) cases showed improvement, whereas two (6.7%) cases were unsatisfied. Conclusion Minor intranasal anatomical variations or hidden infection may be the cause of primary headache misdiagnosed as a headache of unknown etiology. The functional endoscopic sinus surgery had succeeded in eliminating or significantly reducing headache attacks.http://link.springer.com/article/10.4103/ejo.ejo_6_19contact headacheheadacherhinogenic headache
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sayed M. S. Kadah
Sayed M. Mokhemar
Tawfik A. E. Alkholy
Taghreed M. M. Salem
spellingShingle Sayed M. S. Kadah
Sayed M. Mokhemar
Tawfik A. E. Alkholy
Taghreed M. M. Salem
Role of endoscopy in rhinogenic contact headache not responding to medical treatment
The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
contact headache
headache
rhinogenic headache
author_facet Sayed M. S. Kadah
Sayed M. Mokhemar
Tawfik A. E. Alkholy
Taghreed M. M. Salem
author_sort Sayed M. S. Kadah
title Role of endoscopy in rhinogenic contact headache not responding to medical treatment
title_short Role of endoscopy in rhinogenic contact headache not responding to medical treatment
title_full Role of endoscopy in rhinogenic contact headache not responding to medical treatment
title_fullStr Role of endoscopy in rhinogenic contact headache not responding to medical treatment
title_full_unstemmed Role of endoscopy in rhinogenic contact headache not responding to medical treatment
title_sort role of endoscopy in rhinogenic contact headache not responding to medical treatment
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology
issn 1012-5574
2090-8539
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Abstract Objective To assess the role of various anatomical variation of the nose in the pathogenesis of contact point rhinogenic headache of noninfective or organic cause and to evaluate the role of endoscopic surgery with removal or correction of the anatomical variation that caused headache in the management. Patients and methods This study included 30 patients with refractory or resistant headache for more than 1 year and diagnosed to have sinonasal anatomical variations. They were presented to the outpatient clinics of Al-Zahraa University Hospital in the period from May 2015 to May 2018. There ages ranged from 18 to 34 years. A total of 20 (66.7%) patients were males and 10 (33.3%) were females. Data from this group were analyzed retrospectively. Results Multiple anatomical variations were noted by endoscopy and computed tomographic scans in 30 patients. These variations included septum deviation in 30 (100%) patients followed by hypertrophied inferior turbinate in 15 (50%) patients then concha bullosa in 14 (46.7%) patients. In these 30 patients, 25 (83.3%) cases showed complete cure, three (10%) cases showed improvement, whereas two (6.7%) cases were unsatisfied. Conclusion Minor intranasal anatomical variations or hidden infection may be the cause of primary headache misdiagnosed as a headache of unknown etiology. The functional endoscopic sinus surgery had succeeded in eliminating or significantly reducing headache attacks.
topic contact headache
headache
rhinogenic headache
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.4103/ejo.ejo_6_19
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