Definitions
International Headache Society (IHS) codes and diagnoses (23):
6.1.1 Headache attributed to ischemic stroke (cerebral infarction)
A. Any acute headache fulfilling criterion C.
B. Neurological signs and/or neuroimaging evidence of a recent ischemic stroke.
C. Headache develops simultaneously with or in very close temporal relation to signs or other evidence of ischemic stroke.
6.1.2 Headache attributed to transient ischemic attack (TIA)
A. Any acute headache fulfilling criteria C and D.
B. Focal neurologic deficit of ischemic origin lasting <24 hours.
C. Headache develops simultaneously with onset of focal deficit.
D. Headache resolves within 24 hours.
6.2.1 Headache attributed to spontaneous intracerebral hematoma
A. Any acute headache fulfilling criterion C.
B. Neurologic signs or neuroimaging evidence of a recent nontraumatic intracerebral hemorrhage.
C. Headache develops simultaneously with or in very close temporal relation to intracerebral hemorrhage.
WHO code and diagnosis: 44.81. Headache associated with other vascular disorders
Headache is one of the primary features of acute focal cerebrovascular disease. A well-known accompaniment of hemorrhagic stroke, especially subarachnoid hemorrhage, headache is an underemphasized symptom of ischemic stroke, because it is usually overshadowed by other more dramatic clinical manifestations, such as aphasia, hemiplegia, hemianopsia, or neglect.
Thomas Willis (1664) first recognized the relationship between headache and cerebrovascular disease in a patient with asymptomatic carotid artery (CA) occlusion who experienced severe headache ipsilateral to the patent CA (
63). Extreme dilation in the patent CA circulation, secondary to collateral blood flow, was the postulated cause of headache (
63). Three centuries later, Fisher reported the first comprehensive study of headaches associated with ischemic and hemorrhagic cerebrovascular disease (
18). Several authors subsequently provided detailed, but often conflicting, data on the frequency, features, pathogenesis, and prognostic value of headache in acute cerebrovascular disease (
6,
14,
16,
17,
21,
27,
30,
32,
36,
40,
42,
45,
51,
52,
60).