When is a headache not just a headache?

Headaches are one of the most common health complaints. And while many can be caused by stress, a cold, or the weather, a few types of headaches need medical attention as they can be symptoms of a more serious or life-threatening medical condition.
As a neurosurgeon, I treat brain aneurysms, strokes, and arteriovenous malformations (AVMs), all of which may involve head pain in some fashion. I am often asked, “How do I know if my headache is serious?” Here are some clues.
Headache pain can have multiple causes. Tension headaches occur when the muscles of the scalp tighten up and compress the nerves of the skin, which often is felt as a sharp headache.
Other headaches may be due to irritation of the meninges, or the outer covering of the brain.
Migraine headaches are associated with blood vessel constriction over the brain surface, often with a warning symptom such as wavy vision, occurring minutes beforehand. A specific incident, such as a head injury or recent stroke, also can cause lasting headaches.
Other common causes of headache include infections or illness, such as the flu, cold, or sinus infection, as well as stress, dehydration, alcohol, allergies, strong odors, and some foods.
People are most familiar with tension and migraine headaches. Tension headaches are typically caused by stress. They cause moderate pain that is either sharp and focal or is spread equally around the head like a headband.
Migraines can be quite painful, even debilitating, and usually occur in a specific area of the head, such as behind the eyes or on just one side of the head. They are often accompanied by nausea or light sensitivity. When a migraine strikes, it can feel like something is severely wrong.
Sometimes, people with migraines fear they are suffering from a brain aneurysm, which is a bulge in the lining of a weak blood vessel that could burst and lead to fatal bleeding in the brain. The overwhelming majority of people with headaches do not have a serious underlying condition. Most of the time, it’s just a headache.
An aneurysm is a condition, whereas a headache is really the symptom of a condition. A brain aneurysm is a bubble, sac, or outpouching on the sidewall of a blood vessel. Brain aneurysms usually take years to develop and can slowly grow over time. A brain aneurysm usually causes no symptoms if it is small and has not ruptured or bled.
In some cases, symptoms of an aneurysm could include headaches, pain above or behind the eyes, facial numbness, blurry or double vision, or weakness. These symptoms are more common in people with migraines, as migraines are a much more common condition. We believe that approximately three percent of people have a brain aneurysm. The vast majority of these people will never experience a problem from the aneurysm, but a small number of people will. There are approximately 30,000 people who suffer a ruptured brain aneurysm per year in the U.S.
Usually, a brain aneurysm has no symptoms at all until it ruptures. When that happens, you’ll know it because, as some patients say, it comes out of nowhere (like a thunderclap) and feels like the worst headache you’ve ever had, by far. Migraines, on the other hand, tend to come on more gradually, usually over minutes to hours, with precursor symptoms, such as fatigue, nausea, or seeing visual auras. Tension headaches will also develop more gradually, over minutes or hours.
Knowing the difference between these conditions may offer some assurance of how urgently you need to take action.
An aneurysm starts off as a bulge in a weakened section in the wall of an arterial blood vessel. It often occurs in the brain but also can occur anywhere in the body. As blood flow puts pressure on this weak section of the blood vessel wall, the bulge grows out slowly, like a balloon, over time. Sometimes the aneurysm can suddenly burst, causing extreme headache, nausea, vomiting and life-threatening bleeding.
It’s estimated that one in 30 people in the United States live with an unruptured brain aneurysm. Most of these people live normal lives, often not knowing they have one.
I need to emphasize that most patients with an unruptured brain aneurysm will never experience a problem from the aneurysm or even a headache from the aneurysm, but they do need to be fully evaluated by an expert. Typically, unruptured aneurysms are discovered incidentally during imaging or scans, such as an MRI or CT, for other medical conditions or neurological issues.
The words “headache” and “migraine” seem to be used interchangeably a lot, but they are not the same thing. Migraines are a manifestation of a brain disease that requires a clinical diagnosis. They can occur episodically or chronically, are often disabling, and encompass accessory symptoms in addition to head pain.
“…the vast majority of patients with a brain aneurysm will never experience a problem from the aneurysm or even a headache from the aneurysm, but they do need to be fully evaluated by an expert.”
– Reza J. Karimi, MD
Seek immediate medical help if your headache is unusually severe or grows worse, follows a head injury, or is accompanied by vomiting, fever, confusion, decreased alertness, a stiff neck, visual impairment, slurred speech, numbness, weakness, or seizures.
Call your physician if you notice:
Learn more about New Jersey Brain and Spine’s renowned Neurovascular Center here.