Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology
A retrospective study of patients with cluster headaches
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Cited by (26)
Evaluation and management of "sinus headache" in the otolaryngology practice
2014, Otolaryngologic Clinics of North AmericaCitation Excerpt :They found that migraine with and without aura, TN, sinus infection, dental pain, and temporomandibular dysfunction were the disorders most frequently overdiagnosed in spite of the clear-cut criteria the IHS has published for diagnosing trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias. Tables 5–7 summarize the articles reviewed and the findings therein, demonstrating a troublesome tableau of otolaryngologists, oral surgeons, and dentists performing unindicated procedures on these patients before they were finally correctly diagnosed.14–28 Migraine headache is a diagnosis that at times is clear and obvious but many other times is a difficult one, especially when dealing with migraine without aura.
Referrals to the neurology clinic from oral and maxillofacial surgery clinics
2011, British Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial SurgeryCitation Excerpt :A similar joint approach might also be desirable for atypical facial pain, often encountered in neurology clinics and already surveyed in oral and maxillofacial surgical practice.8 The absence of cases of cluster headache or trigeminal autonomic cephalalgia in this series was perhaps surprising (compare with ophthalmology referrals to neurology clinics3) since these conditions can cause facial pain that is sufficient on occasion to prompt consideration of oral or maxillofacial disease, as well as inappropriate dental extractions.9 This study has shown areas of overlap between neurology and oral and maxillofacial surgery.
Diagnosis of Nonodontogenic Toothache
2010, Cohen's Pathways of the Pulp, Tenth EditionTrigeminal autonomic cephalalgias: A review and implications for dentistry
2008, Journal of the American Dental AssociationCitation Excerpt :These authors also found that misdiagnosis often led to unnecessary and inappropriate dental procedures. In another study, Bittar and Graff-Radford97 found that 14 (42 percent) of 33 subjects with CH underwent some form of invasive and irreversible dental procedures. Some investigators have postulated that dental extractions may be a precipitating factor for CH.
Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias. Part 1: cluster headache
2007, Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, Oral Radiology and EndodontologyCitation Excerpt :It has been postulated that dental extractions may be involved in precipitating CH. This is based on the assumption that irritation or deafferentation of C-fibers associated with tooth extraction precipitate alterations to spinal cord and brainstem networks ultimately leading to hypothalamic reorganization.191 Penarrocha et al.,192 in a retrospective study involving 54 confirmed episodic CH subjects, found that prior tooth extraction or endodontics had been performed in the pain-affected quadrant in 31 (58%) of the subjects and in the contralateral quadrant in 18 (33%) subjects.
Lower-half facial migraine: A report of 11 cases
2004, Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery