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CHILDREN SUFFERING FROM HEADACHES (CEPHALEA).

Dr. Elías Jiménez F.

 

There's a belief that children cannot suffer from cephalea, so when it occurs, parents get anguished and fearful.

This is an erroneous belief, since cephalea does not only occur among children older than 5 years, but it is also a common symptom. Some authors have reported that the incidence of cephalea in school children can reach up to 59%, but in only 10% of the cases it is a frequent symptom.

The causes for cephalea in children are very varied. The most frequent ones are those related to migraine (either accompanied or not by visual manifestations), tension, and the ones with no definite cause. These three cover more than 90% of the cases.

In the rest of the patients cephalea is due to multiple factors such as sinusitis, dental problems, difficulty with the eyesight, depression, and occasionally serious illnesses like tumors or vascular malformations.

The pediatrician, who is going to attend the child suffering from cephalea, should know certain things about it. For example, he should know the frequency with which it occurs, its intensity, the time of the day when it happens (if it's during the day when the child is at the school, or does the child wake up at night from the pain). He should also be aware if there are other symptoms, such as vomit, seizures, motor or eyesight problems, associated with it. With this information and with a detailed clinical exam, the pediatrician will be able to establish the cause of the cephalea, how to prevent it and the appropriate treatment.

In the majority of the cases a test like a MRI or CT scan is not necessary, since they would probably show adequate results. Only for a child who has neurological manifestations that have no explanation this tests would be justifiable. It is necessary to maintain a firm position against these tests when there is no need for them, even when the parents pressure us to do them.

If the cause is established with precision, the treatment will be more adequate, focusing on decreasing the family's anxiety, the use of special analgesics, or the use of special migraine medicine, psychological support, and sometimes an appropriate diet.

In general, the prognostic for a child suffering from cephalea is a good one. The cephalea that is the effect of the most typical causes, migraine, tension, or unknown cause, will usually disappear with age. Migraine tends to disappear when the child reaches his 18 years of age, but sometimes it will be present for the rest of his life.

In brief, we can say that headaches or cephalea y a very common symptom in children, and it is generally benign. Its origin can be determined adequately by means of a good clinical exam and without the need of more complex tests. And it can also be treated and prevented in the appropriate way by the pediatrician.

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