What causes headaches Dan Kwartler

In ancient Greece, headaches were
considered powerful afflictions.

Victims prayed for relief from Asclepius,
the god of medicine.

And if pain continued,

a medical practitioner would perform
the best-known remedy—

drilling a small hole in the
skull to drain supposedly infected blood.

This dire technique, called trepanation,

often replaced the headache
with a more permanent condition.

Fortunately, doctors today don’t resort
to power tools to cure headaches.

But we still have a lot
to learn about this ancient ailment.

Today, we’ve classified headaches
into two camps—

primary headaches

and secondary headaches.

The former are not symptomatic of an
underlying disease, injury, or condition;

they are the condition.

But we’ll come back to them in a minute

because while primary headaches
account for 50% of reported cases,

we actually know much more
about secondary headaches.

These are caused by other health problems,

with triggers ranging
from dehydration and caffeine withdrawal

to head and neck injury,

and heart disease.

Doctors have classified
over 150 diagnosable types,

all with different potential causes,
symptoms, and treatments.

But we’ll take just one common case
—a sinus infection—as an example.

The sinuses are a system of cavities

that spread behind
our foreheads, noses, and upper cheeks.

When our sinuses are infected,

our immune response heats up the area,

roasting the bacteria and inflaming
the cavities well past their usual size.

The engorged sinuses put pressure
on the cranial arteries and veins,

as well as muscles in the neck and head.

Their pain receptors, called nociceptors,
trigger in response,

cueing the brain to release a flood
of neuropeptides

that inflame the cranial blood
vessels, swelling and heating up the head.

This discomfort,
paired with hyper-sensitive head muscles,

creates the sore,
throbbing pain of a headache.

Not all headache pain comes from swelling.

Tense muscles and inflamed,
sensitive nerves

cause varying degrees
of discomfort in each headache.

But all cases are reactions
to some cranial irritant.

While the cause is clear
in secondary headaches,

the origins of primary headaches
remain unknown.

Scientists are still investigating
potential triggers

for the three types of primary headaches:

recurring, long-lasting migraines;

intensely painful,
rapid-fire cluster headaches;

and, most common of all,
the tension headache.

As the name suggests,

tension headaches are known for creating
the sensation

of a tight band squeezed around the head.

These headaches increase the tenderness of
the pericranial muscles,

which then painfully pulse
with blood and oxygen.

Patients report stress, dehydration,
and hormone changes as triggers,

but these don’t fit
the symptoms quite right.

For example, in dehydration headaches,

the frontal lobe actually
shrinks away from the skull,

creating forehead swelling

that doesn’t match the location
of the pain in tension headaches.

Scientists have theories
for what the actual cause is,

ranging from spasming blood vessels

to overly sensitive nociceptors,

but no one knows for sure.

Meanwhile, most headache research is
focused on more severe primary headaches.

Migraines are recurring headaches, which
create a vise-like sensation on the skull

that can last from four hours
to three days.

In 20% of cases, these attacks are
intense enough

to overload the brain
with electrical energy,

which hyper-excites sensory nerve endings.

This produces hallucinations called auras,

which can include seeing flashing lights

and geometric patterns
and experiencing tingling sensations.

Cluster headaches,
another primary headache type,

cause burning, stabbing bursts
of pain behind one eye,

leading to a red eye, constricted pupil,
and drooping eyelid.

What can be done about these conditions,

which dramatically affect
many people’s quality of life?

Tension headaches and most secondary cases

can be treated with
over-the-counter pain medications,

such as anti-inflammatory drugs
that reduce cranial swelling.

And many secondary headache triggers,

like dehydration,

eye strain,

and stress,

can be proactively avoided.

Migraines and cluster headaches
are more complicated,

and we haven’t yet discovered reliable
treatments that work for everyone.

But thankfully, pharmacologists
and neurologists are hard at work

cracking these pressing mysteries
that weigh so heavily on our minds.

在古希腊,头痛被
认为是一种强烈的痛苦。

受害者祈求药神阿斯克勒庇俄斯的救济

如果疼痛持续存在

,医生会
采取最有名的补救措施——

在颅骨上钻一个小洞,
以排出可能被感染的血液。

这种可怕的技术,称为钻孔,

经常
用更持久的情况代替头痛。

幸运的是,今天的医生不再
使用电动工具来治疗头痛。

但是
对于这种古老的疾病,我们还有很多需要了解。

今天,我们将头痛
分为两个阵营——

原发性头痛

和继发性头痛。

前者不是
潜在疾病、损伤或状况的症状;

他们是条件。

但是我们会在一分钟内回到它们,

因为虽然原发性头痛
占报告病例的 50%,

但我们实际上
对继发性头痛了解得更多。

这些是由其他健康问题引起的

,触发因素
从脱水和咖啡因戒断

到头部和颈部受伤

以及心脏病。

医生
对 150 多种可诊断类型进行了分类,

所有类型都有不同的潜在原因、
症状和治疗方法。

但我们将仅以一种常见的情况
——鼻窦感染为例。

鼻窦是一个腔体系统

,分布在
我们的前额、鼻子和上脸颊后面。

当我们的鼻窦被感染时,

我们的免疫反应会加热该区域,

烘烤细菌
并使腔体发炎,使其远远超过通常的大小。

充血的鼻窦
对颅动脉和静脉

以及颈部和头部的肌肉施加压力。

它们的疼痛感受器,称为伤害感受器,会
触发反应,

提示大脑释放大量
神经肽

,使颅血管发炎
,使头部肿胀和发热。

这种不适,
再加上头部肌肉过度敏感,

会产生头痛的疼痛、
悸动性疼痛。

并非所有的头痛都来自肿胀。

紧张的肌肉和发炎的
敏感神经

在每次头痛时都会引起不同程度的不适。

但所有病例都是
对一些颅内刺激物的反应。

虽然
继发性头痛的原因很清楚,

但原发性头痛的起源
仍然未知。

科学家们仍在研究

三种原发性头痛的潜在诱因:

反复发作的长期偏头痛;

剧烈疼痛,
快速发作的丛集性头痛;

最常见的
是紧张性头痛。

顾名思义,

紧张性头痛以

产生紧绷带挤压头部的感觉而闻名。

这些头痛增加
了颅周肌肉的压痛

,然后
随着血液和氧气而痛苦地搏动。

患者报告压力、脱水
和激素变化是触发因素,

但这些
与症状不太相符。

例如,在脱水性头痛中

,额叶实际上会
从头骨收缩,

造成前额肿胀

,这与
紧张性头痛的疼痛位置不匹配。

科学家们
对真正的原因有理论,

从血管痉挛

到过度敏感的伤害感受器,

但没有人确切知道。

同时,大多数头痛研究都
集中在更严重的原发性头痛上。

偏头痛是反复出现的头痛,会
在头骨上产生类似虎钳的感觉

,可持续四小时
到三天。

在 20% 的情况下,这些攻击的
强度足以

使大脑
因电能超载,

从而过度兴奋感觉神经末梢。

这会产生称为光环的幻觉,

包括看到闪烁的灯光

和几何图案
以及体验刺痛感。

丛集性头痛是
另一种原发性头痛类型,

会导致
一只眼睛后部灼痛、刺痛,

导致眼睛发红、瞳孔缩小
和眼睑下垂。

对于

这些严重影响
许多人的生活质量的疾病,我们能做些什么呢?

紧张性头痛和大多数继发性病例

可以
用非处方止痛药治疗,

例如
减少颅内肿胀的消炎药。

许多继发性头痛诱因,

如脱水、

眼睛疲劳

和压力,

都可以主动避免。

偏头痛和丛集性
头痛更为复杂

,我们还没有
找到适合所有人的可靠治疗方法。

但值得庆幸的是,药理学家
和神经学家正在努力

破解这些压
在我们脑海中的紧迫谜团。