Chronic daily headaches - Symptoms and causes (original) (raw)

Overview

Most people have headaches from time to time. But if you have a headache more days than not, you might have chronic daily headaches.

Rather than a specific headache type, chronic daily headaches include a variety of headache subtypes. Chronic refers to how often the headaches occur and how long the condition lasts.

The constant nature of chronic daily headaches makes them one of the most disabling headache conditions. Aggressive initial treatment and steady, long-term management might reduce pain and lead to fewer headaches.

Symptoms

By definition, chronic daily headaches occur 15 days or more a month, for longer than three months. True (primary) chronic daily headaches aren't caused by another condition.

There are short-lasting and long-lasting chronic daily headaches. Long-lasting headaches last more than four hours. They include:

Chronic migraine

This type typically occurs in people with a history of episodic migraines. Chronic migraines tend to:

And they cause at least one of the following:

Chronic tension-type headache

These headaches tend to:

New daily persistent headache

These headaches come on suddenly, usually in people without a headache history. They become constant within three days of your first headache. They:

Hemicrania continua

These headaches:

In addition, hemicrania continua headaches are associated with at least one of the following:

When to see a doctor

Occasional headaches are common, and usually require no medical attention. However, consult your doctor if:

Seek prompt medical care if your headache:

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Causes

The causes of many chronic daily headaches aren't well-understood. True (primary) chronic daily headaches don't have an identifiable underlying cause.

Conditions that might cause nonprimary chronic daily headaches include:

Medication overuse headache

This type of headache usually develops in people who have an episodic headache disorder, usually migraine or tension type, and take too much pain medication. If you're taking pain medications — even over-the-counter — more than two days a week (or nine days a month), you're at risk of developing rebound headaches.

Risk factors

Factors associated with developing frequent headaches include:

Complications

If you have chronic daily headaches, you're also more likely to have depression, anxiety, sleep disturbances, and other psychological and physical problems.

Prevention

Taking care of yourself might help ease chronic daily headaches.