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March 2025Headache
Headache is a common clinical presentation. Patients with headaches due to serious or life-threatening conditions must be differentiated from those with benign primary headache disorders.
(list not exhaustive)
Primary headache (e.g., tension-type, migraine, chronic daily headache with medication overuse)
Secondary headache
Attributed to trauma or injury to the head and/or neck
Attributed to cranial or cervical vascular disorder
Attributed to nonvascular intracranial disorder
Attributed to infection
Other causes (e.g., substance use or withdrawal, disorder of homeostasis)
Given a patient with headaches, the candidate will diagnose the cause, severity, and complications, and initiate an appropriate management plan. Particular attention should be paid to differentiating benign causes of headaches from potentially serious causes.
Given a patient with headaches, the candidate will:
list and interpret critical clinical findings, including those based on
symptoms and signs to differentiate among the various causes of headaches, and
symptoms and signs that indicate a need for urgent brain imaging and/or referral for specialized care;
list and interpret critical investigations, including
appropriate and cost-effective laboratory and diagnostic imaging tests, and
indications and contraindications for lumbar puncture;
construct an effective management plan, including
describing and contrasting symptomatic and prophylactic treatments,
avoiding medication overuse,
determining if the patient needs urgent and/or specialized care,
educating and counselling the patient regarding the causes and management of headaches, and
determining if the patient is at risk for problematic substance use.