A cluster headache strikes quickly, usually without warning. - TopicsExpress



          

A cluster headache strikes quickly, usually without warning. Common signs and symptoms include: Excruciating pain, generally located in or around one eye, but may radiate to other areas of your face, head, neck and shoulders One-sided pain Restlessness Excessive tearing Redness in your eye on the affected side Stuffy or runny nasal passage in your nostril on the affected side of your face Sweaty, pale skin (pallor) on your face Swelling around your eye on the affected side of your face Drooping eyelid The pain of a cluster headache is often described as sharp, penetrating or burning. People with this condition say that the pain feels like a hot poker being stuck in the eye or that the eye is being pushed out of its socket. People with cluster headache appear restless. They may pace or sit through the attack. In contrast to people with migraine, people with cluster headache usually avoid lying down during an attack because this position seems to increase the pain. Some migraine-like symptoms — including nausea, sensitivity to light and sound, and aura — may occur with a cluster headache, though usually on one side. Cluster period characteristics A cluster period generally lasts from six to 12 weeks. The starting date and the duration of each cluster period may be consistent from period to period. For example, cluster periods may occur seasonally, such as every spring or every fall. Most people have episodic cluster headaches. In episodic cluster headaches, the cluster headaches occur for one week to a year, followed by a pain-free remission period that may last as long as 12 months before another cluster headache develops. Chronic cluster periods may continue for more than a year, or pain-free periods may last less than one month. During a cluster period: Headaches usually occur every day, sometimes several times a day. A single attack may last from 15 minutes to three hours. The attacks often happen at the same time within each 24-hour day. The majority of attacks occur at night, usually one to two hours after you go to bed. The pain usually ends as suddenly as it begins, with rapidly decreasing intensity. After attacks, most people are completely free from pain, but exhausted. _Mayo Clinc
Posted on: Tue, 09 Dec 2014 09:07:24 +0000

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