Headache is the pain concentrated in the temple and spread to the jaw. What should I do?
Could be a migraine. To diagnose mental problems, we should first pay attention to rest, let our mind relax, and don't be too nervous and uneasy. Boredom and depression can also have an impact, so it is also important to relax and stay happy. Press the temple with both hands when it hurts, and then release it later. If it doesn't improve, use the same method several times. Pay attention to rest at ordinary times and use your brain less. Your illness may be migraine (it is best to go to the hospital for diagnosis). I want to find you some information about migraine. I hope it will help you: 1. What is migraine? Migraine is a kind of vascular headache, which is a recurrent headache caused by the dysfunction of blood vessels in and out of the brain. Its attack is characterized by unilateral or turning from one side to the other, accompanied by nausea and vomiting. There may be premonitions before the attack, and the intermission may be like a normal person with a family history. Second, what types can migraine be divided into? Migraine can be divided into the following categories: (1) common migraine (migraine without aura): it is the most common type of migraine, accounting for more than 80% of migraine patients. The premonitory symptoms are dispensable, and if there are premonitions, they are only short-lived and slightly vague. The process of headache is the same as typical migraine, but it is usually left and right, and it is pulsating in nature. Physical activity can aggravate headaches. Sometimes it starts from both sides. Headache lasts for a long time, usually lasting 1 ~ 3 days, or several days, accompanied by nausea, vomiting, sweating and other symptoms. Often have a family history. In women, headache is sometimes related to menstrual cycle, which is called "menstrual migraine". (2) Typical migraine: (symptomatic migraine with aura) The clinical manifestation is recurrent migraine, which has the following characteristics: there are the most common and typical visual aura before the onset of headache, and some flickering dark spots, sparks, "W" flashes, "stars in front of eyes" or hemianopia (one side can't see) appear 20-30 minutes before the onset of headache. These symptoms often appear on one side of the visual field, peak before the headache comes, and then disappear. Rare aura may include hemiplegia, facial acupuncture, hemiplegia or inability to speak. Migraine occurs shortly after the aura disappears, usually starting from one side of the frontotemporal region (around the temple) or around the orbit, and a few can start from the occipital region and gradually spread to half of the head or the whole head. Headache is getting worse, from dull pain to pulsatile or pulsatile pain (jumping pain). Fix on one side or both sides. Pressing local blood vessels with your fingers can relieve headaches. Headache is accompanied by autonomic symptoms such as pallor, nausea and vomiting. At this time, the patient is very tired, obviously afraid of light and noise, and likes to lie alone in a dark room. Every headache lasts for several hours to more than ten hours. A few people can persist in 1 ~ 2 days, and often they can fully recover after a sleep. There are many abnormal findings in cerebral rheogram and Doppler ultrasound, which are helpful for diagnosis. Typical migraine can be divided into several subtypes: (1) migraine with typical aura: including eye migraine, hemiplegic migraine, aphasia migraine, etc. At least the above two typical attacks have occurred, and the diagnosis can only be made after excluding organic diseases. (2) Migraine with prolonged aura (complex migraine): The symptoms are the same (1). During the headache attack, the aura still exists, lasting more than 1 hour, but less than 1 week. Neuroimaging examination can not find intracranial structural lesions. (3) Basal migraine (formerly known as basal migraine): There are premonitory symptoms clearly originating from brain stem or bilateral occipital lobes, such as blindness, visual symptoms in both temporal and nasal visual fields, dysarthria, dizziness, tinnitus, hearing loss, diplopia, ataxia, bilateral paresis or insanity. Most of them disappeared within a few minutes to 1 hour, followed by bilateral occipital pulsating headache. (4) Headache-free migraine aura (migraine equipotential attack): There are various aura symptoms during migraine attack, but sometimes headache does not follow. When the patient is older, the headache can disappear completely, and there are still paroxysmal premonitory symptoms, but few people have premonitory symptoms without headache. The first onset after the age of 40 requires in-depth examination, except for thromboembolic TIA. Ophthalmoplegia migraine: rare. The onset age is mostly under 30 years old. Have a history of headache attacks fixed on one side. After severe headache (orbital or retroorbital pain), ipsilateral ophthalmoplegia occurs, especially ptosis. Paralysis lasts for a few days or weeks and then recovers. At first, the paralysis completely recovered, but after several attacks, part of the eye muscle paralysis could not be recovered. Neuroimaging examination excluded intracranial organic lesions. (4) Benign paroxysmal vertigo (migraine attack) in childhood: there is a family history of migraine but the child himself has no headache. It is characterized by repeated and short-term vertigo attacks, paroxysmal imbalance and anxiety, accompanied by nystagmus or vomiting. The nervous system and EEG are normal. Everything is normal during the intermission. Some children will turn into migraines as adults. (5) The status quo of migraine A migraine attack lasts for more than 72 hours (during which there may be a remission period shorter than 4 hours), which is called the status quo of migraine.