October 19, 2007
Causes for Headaches - Simple and Complex
I do not like headaches at all, and even though I do everything to avoid them I get a headache several times a month. My poor grandfather had a headache every day of his life until his death at 93. Often they were small, but some days he would have a severe one. Still he would go out and do the farm chores and plow the fields. He was much tougher than I am.
Given the variety of headaches, and headache sufferers, it shouldn’t be surprising that the causes are equally diverse. There are literally hundreds of possible causes for headaches. Some are the result of underlying medical problems, such as (in rare cases) brain tumors or cerebral aneurysms. But the most common headaches have common causes.
In many cases, simple eyestrain (such as from working too long at the computer) can produce a headache. In other cases, ordinary inflammation of the sinuses (due to head cold or allergy) can be the cause. My daughter gets allergy headaches. I took her to the doctor and she prescribed two over-the-counter things to take every day. If you suffer from these, your doctor can probably help you, too.
Overuse of certain prescription medicines can produce a headache of a type labeled, appropriately enough, MOH (medication overuse headache). Some people get headaches from chocolate, from sugar, from tree nuts, and from any number of other food culprits. More on that topic later in this post.
Though the exact cause isn’t known in every instance, constriction of blood vessels is thought to be the culprit in a range of cases. Pain-sensitive nerve fibers in the head line blood vessel walls. When they contract (or dilate) the nerves are activated, sending signals to the brain. Ironically, the brain itself can’t feel pain since it has no pain-sensitive nerve cells within it. Tension-type headaches or cluster headaches are the result.
But blood vessels can dilate as well as contract. When they do, so one theory goes, migraines and cluster headaches can be produced. Current research suggests that there are other, perhaps more important, factors at work in migraines.
Tension headaches can result from other causes, such as tension in the muscles of the neck, shoulder and even the jaw. Those who have experienced TMJ disorder (a condition resulting from tension of the temporomandibular joint, in which the jaw tightens against the skull) are familiar with this last.
In more serious cases, headaches are the result of some underlying disease, where they are labeled ’secondary headaches’. This happens when a patient suffers from encephalitis or brain cancer, for example. But the list of diseases that can cause headaches is also lengthy. Everything from irritable bowel syndrome to rabies or scarlet fever can be the culprit.
In many cases, environmental factors are at work. Carbon monoxide poisoning, resulting from a gas of the type produced by automobile exhaust, can cause severe headaches. In fact, headache is one of the chief symptoms of the condition.
Allergies, such as sensitivity to pollen, are the problem for some. Lead poisoning is a potential cause of headaches, though less a problem these days. Food poisoning is still fairly common, though.
Even when food isn’t actually toxic in general, such as being laced with a bacteria, certain individuals may be sensitive to compounds that won’t affect people in general. Common foods as chocolate or cheese can cause headaches in some. Caffeine has long been known to produce headaches when taken in too large a quantity. Some preservatives, such as monosodium glutamate, can produce headache pain. Red wine, even in moderation, does it for some.
Other things such as position, posture and other controllable factors may well be some of the most common causes, especially today. As more and more people use computers on a daily basis, more people are producing neck tension, jaw stress, eyestrain and facial tightening. Any of these can produce a headache if the circumstances persist, as they often do for information workers.
Approximately 85%-90% of headaches are common tension headaches, and they are typically the result of one or more of the above. That means, in the overwhelming majority of cases, the cure is simple and within your control. If your headaches are causing you to lose a lot of work or are coming more and more frequently, see your doctor. He or she might be able to stop them altogether, or at least prescribe something that can help reduce the severity or the frequency.








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