Department of Anesthesia, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Sidney Kimmel College of Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Curr Pain Headache Rep. 2018 Aug 14;22(10):69. doi: 10.1007/s11916-018-0722-4.
This article discusses the etiology and management of post-craniotomy headache and pain. A review of available as well as investigatory treatment modalities is offered, followed by suggestions for optimal management of post-craniotomy headache.
There is a dearth of evidence-based practice regarding the differential diagnosis, natural history, and management of post-craniotomy headache. The etiology of post-craniotomy headache is typically multifactorial, with patients' medical history, type of craniotomy, and perioperative management all playing a role. Post-craniotomy headaches are often undertreated, yet available evidence supports a multimodal approach for both prophylaxis and management. Many therapeutic techniques that aim to treat or prevent post-craniotomy headache require more robust validation than clinical evidence currently imparts. Pre- and intraoperative locoregional anesthesia should be the mainstay of prophylaxis; the role of opiates co-administered with analgesics, corticosteroids, and antiepileptic therapy in the acute perioperative phase is of paramount importance. Treatment of chronic PCH is less well-defined but should involve trials of analgesic, antineuropathic, and antiepileptic medications before enlisting experimental treatments. Comorbid psychiatric, musculoskeletal, or seizure disorders should be managed distinctly from post-craniotomy headaches. In patients failing all extant therapies, experimental approaches should be considered. These include subanesthetic ketamine infusion or surgical site injection with local anesthetics, corticosteroids, or botulinum toxin. Post-craniotomy headache is a complex phenomenon with many underutilized treatment options available, and many more under investigation. Nonetheless, further research is required to differentiate the efficacy of contemporary treatment strategies and to elucidate the applicability of novel therapies.
本文讨论了开颅术后头痛和疼痛的病因和治疗。本文对现有治疗方法和研究性治疗方法进行了回顾,随后对开颅术后头痛的最佳治疗提出了建议。
目前,关于开颅术后头痛的鉴别诊断、自然病程和治疗方法,尚缺乏循证医学证据。开颅术后头痛的病因通常是多因素的,患者的病史、开颅术类型和围手术期管理都起着一定的作用。开颅术后头痛常常治疗不足,但现有证据支持预防和治疗的多模式方法。许多旨在治疗或预防开颅术后头痛的治疗技术需要比目前提供的临床证据更有力的验证。术前和术中局部麻醉应是预防的主要方法;阿片类药物与镇痛药、皮质类固醇和抗癫痫治疗联合应用在围手术期急性期的作用至关重要。慢性 PCH 的治疗定义不明确,但应在尝试使用实验性治疗之前,先尝试使用镇痛药、抗神经痛和抗癫痫药物进行治疗。应将伴有精神科、肌肉骨骼或癫痫疾病的患者与开颅术后头痛明显区分开来。对于所有现有治疗方法均失败的患者,应考虑采用实验性方法。这些方法包括亚麻醉剂量氯胺酮输注或在手术部位用局部麻醉剂、皮质类固醇或肉毒毒素注射。开颅术后头痛是一种复杂的现象,有许多未充分利用的治疗方法,还有更多的方法正在研究中。尽管如此,仍需要进一步的研究来区分当代治疗策略的疗效,并阐明新疗法的适用性。