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. 2009 Jan;14(1):24-30.
doi: 10.1093/pch/14.1.24.

The evaluation and management of paediatric headaches

Affiliations

The evaluation and management of paediatric headaches

Jm Dooley. Paediatr Child Health. 2009 Jan.

Abstract

The management of patients with headaches is a major component of every paediatric practice. In a nationally representative sample of Canadian adolescents, it was found that 26.6% of those 12 to 13 years of age and 31.2% of those 14 to 15 years of age reported that they experienced headaches at least once per week.The diagnosis of headaches in children and adolescents is established through a headache history in the vast majority of patients. Specific questions can identify those at most risk for headaches secondary to underlying pathology. Similarly, the examination should be tailored to identify those who require further investigation. Investigations are not routinely indicated for paediatric headache, but neuroimaging should be considered in children whose headaches do not meet the criteria for one of the primary headache syndromes and in those with an abnormal neurological examination.The optimal treatment of primary headaches should begin with nonpharmacological methods. Preventive pharmacological therapy should be considered when headaches significantly impair the patient's quality of life. Flunarizine may be valuable in paediatric headache prevention, and ibuprofen, acetaminophen and nasal sumatriptan may be effective in the acute management of headaches.

La prise en charge des patients qui ont des céphalées est un aspect important de toute pratique pédiatrique. Dans un échantillon représentatif national d’adolescents canadiens, on a découvert que 26,6 % de ceux de 12 à 13 ans et 31,2 % de ceux de 14 à 15 ans déclaraient souffrir de céphalées au moins une fois par semaine.

Pour poser un diagnostic de céphalée chez les enfants et les adolescents, il faut obtenir les antécédents de céphalées chez la majorité des patients. Des questions précises permettent de déterminer ceux qui risquent le plus de souffrir de céphalées imputables à une pathologie sous-jacente. De même, il faut adapter l’examen pour repérer ceux qui ont besoin d’explorations plus approfondies. On ne demande pas des explorations d’emblée en cas de céphalée pédiatrique, mais il faut envisager une neuro-imagerie chez les enfants dont les céphalées ne respectent pas les critères de l’un des syndromes de céphalées primaires ou dont l’examen neurologique est anormal.

Pour prodiguer un traitement optimal des céphalées primaires, il faut commencer par des méthodes non pharmacologiques. Il faut envisager la thérapie pharmacologique préventive seulement si les céphalées nuisent considérablement à la qualité de vie du patient.

La flunarizine peut être utile pour prévenir les céphalées pédiatriques, et l’ibuprofène, l’acétaminophène et le sumatriptan nasal peuvent être efficaces pour leur prise en charge aiguë.

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