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Headache is common in adolescents and children and it is a frequent reason to seek
medical care for pediatric patients. The Global Burden of Disease study found that
the headache disorders are the second-leading cause of disability globally in 2017. In
children (age <7 years) headaches are slightly less common in young girls than boys
but this ratio begins to change around the time of puberty, where the prevalence of
headache is significantly lower in men than in women. In adolescence, 20% of boys and
27% of girls describe frequent or severe headaches, and 5% of boys and 8% of girls have
had a migraine in the past year. In adults, over 60% of men and 80% of women have
had a headache, and 6% of men and 15% of women report having had a migraine in
the past year. Headache disorders are classified into primary and secondary headaches.
Primary headaches are further classified into migraine, Tension-type headache and
cluster headache. Migraine is common in pediatric patients, with a prevalence of 1%
to 3% in children age 3 to 7 years and 8% to 23% in adolescence, when migraine is
less common in boys than in girls. Migraine headaches with aura are less common
than those without aura, but both can affect children. Other types of less common
migraine headaches are basilar, confusional, and hemiplegic. Secondary headaches are
classified into to ocular or non-ocular causes. Non-ocular causes can be due to elevated
ICP, Meningitis or encephalitis, Chiari I malformation, intracranial hemorrhage and
posttraumatic headache.
Ocular causes of headache are Refractive error, Accommodative dysfunction,
Binocular vision abnormalities and Ocular health. Regarding refractive errors,
Fasih U et al, in 2017, reported refractive errors represented 16.4% of the cases who
presented with headache. Where the astigmatism was more frequent (65%) followed
by hypermetropia (25%) and myopia (10%). Accommodative dysfunctions such as
insufficiency, infacility and spasm can cause headache. In accommodative insufficiency
the AA is lower than expected for the patient's age. Those patients have a decreased
PRA and usually fail the +/� 2.00 D flipper test. Accommodative infacility patients
report blurry vision at distance after prolonged near focusing and vice versa. Spasm
of accommodation is spasm of Ciliary muscle that produces excess accommodation
secondary to overstimulation of the parasympathetic nervous system, cholinergic
drugs, trauma or MG. those patients usually have impairment of distance vision and
MEM lead. Binocular vision abnormalities include convergence insufficiency/excess,
divergence insufficiency/excess, vergence insufficiency and vertical phoria. Fasih U et
al, in 2017, demonstrated other causes of headache; they found 3.96% patients with
glaucoma, 0.53% with papilloedema and 5.80% with corneal ulcers.
In conclusion, it is very important to do comprehensive eye examination for patients
present with headache to r/o ocular causes. Based on the previous studies, the majority
of patients with headache had associated ocular causes
Biography
Dr. Abdulrahman J Alharbi was graduated from Qassim University and he is currently working as a Optometry Doctor (OD) in Ministry of health. Dr. Alharbi is also specialized in clinical optometry, contact lens and low vision rehabilitation. Dr. Alharbi has published papers in international journals and presented his research work in various national and international conferences.
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