De novo headache in ischemic stroke patients treated with thrombectomy: a prospective study
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Gallo, Daniel; Leire, Manrique; Polanco, Marcos; González Mandly, Andrés Antonio; Torres Díaz, Eduardo; Palacio Portilla, Enrique Jesús; Vázquez Barquero, José Luis

Fecha
2022Derechos
Attribution 4.0 International
© The Author(s) 2022
Publicado en
The Journal of Headache and Pain volume 23, Article number: 85 (2022)
Editorial
Springer
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Palabras clave
Endovascular thrombectomy
Headache
ICHD-3
Stroke
Resumen/Abstract
Background and aim
Headache attributed to intracranial endovascular procedures is described in the ICHD-3. Our aim was to study the frequency and characteristics of headache specifically related to thrombectomy in patients with ischemic stroke.
Methods
Prospective evaluation of clinical features of headache after thrombectomy using an ad hoc questionnaire.
Results
One hundred seventeen patients were included (52.1% females). Most had an anterior circulation artery occlusion (91.5%). 93 (79.5%) received general anaesthesia. 111 (94.9%) required stent retriever, 21 (24.4%) angioplasty and 19 (16.2%) aspiration thrombectomy. 31 (26.5%; 95% CI 18.8?35.5%) had headache related to thrombectomy, and it was associated with a history of primary headache (p =?0.004). No differences about sex, initial NIHSS score, or the type or complexity of the procedure were observed. Headache was usually moderate and oppressive, ipsilateral to the artery occlusion and usually lasted less than 48?hours.
Conclusions
Almost one-third of patients with ischemic stroke who undergo endovascular thrombectomy experience headache in the first 24?hours, occurring more frequently in patients who had a previous history of headaches regardless of the procedure complexity.
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