International Classification of Headache Disorders
The International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD) is a standardized, evidence-based diagnostic system developed by the International Headache Society (IHS) to classify and provide criteria for diagnosing all known headache disorders, encompassing over 300 subtypes organized into primary headaches (such as migraine and tension-type headache), secondary headaches (caused by underlying conditions), cranial neuralgias, facial pain, and other related disorders.[1][2] First published in 1988 as ICHD-1 in the journal Cephalalgia, the classification aimed to address the lack of uniform diagnostic standards for headaches, which had previously hindered clinical practice and research.[3][4] The system evolved through revisions, with ICHD-2 released in 2004 to incorporate new scientific evidence and refine criteria, followed by a beta version of ICHD-3 in 2013 that incorporated feedback from global experts.[3] The final ICHD-3, published in 2018, represents the current edition and features a hierarchical structure allowing diagnoses at general, specific, or subtype levels, facilitating precise identification in diverse clinical settings.[3][2] Developed by the IHS Classification Committee—comprising international neurologists and headache specialists under chairs like Jes Olesen and later Peter J. Goadsby—the ICHD promotes uniformity in headache diagnosis worldwide, supports epidemiological studies, and guides treatment decisions by distinguishing benign primary disorders from serious secondary ones requiring urgent intervention.[3][5] As of 2025, ICHD-3 remains the authoritative reference, with ongoing work toward ICHD-4 involving open calls for submissions to integrate emerging research, though no new edition has been finalized.[6] Translated into more than 20 languages by IHS affiliates, it is freely accessible online and has become indispensable for healthcare professionals, enabling consistent patient care and advancing headache science globally.[4][1]Introduction
Definition and Purpose
The International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD) is a detailed, hierarchical diagnostic system developed by the International Headache Society (IHS) to classify and diagnose over 300 headache and facial pain disorders based on their clinical features.[7] This classification organizes disorders into primary headaches (independent conditions such as migraine), secondary headaches (attributable to underlying causes), and other categories, providing a standardized nomenclature for consistent identification in clinical settings.[7] The core purpose of the ICHD is to enable precise diagnosis, inform treatment decisions, support epidemiological research, and foster global communication among clinicians and researchers dealing with headache disorders.[7] By establishing clear criteria, it helps differentiate primary from secondary headaches, thereby aiding in the exclusion of serious underlying pathologies and improving patient outcomes through targeted management.[7] The ICHD's first operationalized criteria were introduced in 1988 with the initial edition (ICHD-1), marking a shift from prior descriptive approaches to evidence-informed diagnostics.[8] It is updated periodically to integrate emerging scientific evidence, ensuring relevance without serving as a treatment guideline—rather, it functions solely as a diagnostic framework.[7] The ICHD complements the World Health Organization's International Classification of Diseases, 11th Revision (ICD-11) by providing more specialized, granular codes tailored to headache disorders, which enhances diagnostic precision beyond the broader disease categorization in ICD-11.[7]Scope and Importance
The International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD), in its third edition (ICHD-3) published in 2018, provides a comprehensive framework for diagnosing and classifying headache disorders, encompassing primary headaches such as migraine and tension-type headache, which are idiopathic in origin; secondary headaches attributable to underlying medical conditions like trauma, vascular disorders, or infections; painful cranial neuropathies; and other facial pains.[7] It organizes these into 14 main categories with detailed subcodes, focusing exclusively on headache-related pains while excluding unrelated non-headache disorders unless they manifest as facial or cranial pain.[9] This scope ensures a structured approach to differentiate benign primary conditions from potentially life-threatening secondary ones, such as those caused by intracranial tumors or subarachnoid hemorrhage.[7] Headache disorders represent a significant global public health challenge, affecting approximately 40% of the world's population (about 3.1 billion people as of 2021) and ranking as a leading cause of disability, with migraine alone contributing to the third-highest burden of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) worldwide.[10] The ICHD plays a pivotal role in addressing this by enabling early detection of serious underlying causes through its secondary headache classifications, thereby facilitating timely interventions that can prevent complications.[7] Its standardized diagnostic criteria have been instrumental in reducing misdiagnosis rates, which can exceed 70% in primary care settings without such guidelines, improving patient outcomes and resource allocation in clinical practice.[11] Beyond patient care, the ICHD supports epidemiological research and global health policy by providing consistent terminology and methodology, which has influenced the World Health Organization's recognition of headaches as a major contributor to neurological disability.[4][10] Widely adopted internationally through translations into over a dozen languages by affiliate societies of the International Headache Society, it is integrated into medical education curricula and clinical guidelines, including those from the American Headache Society, promoting uniform application across over 50 countries.[12][1] This universal acceptance enhances comparative studies, treatment trials, and public health initiatives aimed at mitigating the socioeconomic impact of these disorders.[4]History and Development
Origins and Early Editions
The origins of the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD) trace back to efforts to standardize headache diagnosis amid growing recognition of the need for uniformity in clinical and research practices. In 1962, the World Health Organization (WHO) convened an ad hoc committee to develop a pilot classification, but it failed to gain widespread acceptance due to its vague definitions and lack of operational criteria.[8] This gap persisted until 1982, when the International Headache Society (IHS) was established to advance headache research and treatment globally.[4] In 1985, at the IHS congress in Copenhagen, a classification committee was formed under the chairmanship of Jes Olesen, comprising experts selected for their regional representation and specialized knowledge; the committee's work, funded by pharmaceutical companies including Janssen and Sandoz, spanned 1985 to 1987 and relied on expert consensus to operationalize symptoms such as migraine aura.[4] Influenced by earlier works like Vahlquist's 1962 criteria for migraine in children, the committee aimed to create explicit, testable diagnostic standards.[8] The first edition, ICHD-1, was published in 1988 as a 96-page supplement in Cephalalgia, distributing over 100,000 copies worldwide and marking the inaugural international standard for headache classification.[8] It organized headaches into 13 major diagnostic groups, encompassing primary headaches (those not attributable to another disorder) and secondary headaches (those caused by underlying conditions), introducing this fundamental dichotomy to facilitate differential diagnosis.[4] With approximately 78 specific diagnoses across subtypes, ICHD-1 emphasized operational criteria derived from clinical consensus, including distinctions for migraine with and without aura supported by emerging neuroimaging evidence like regional cerebral blood flow studies; it was endorsed by the IHS, the World Federation of Neurology, and the WHO, and translated into more than 20 languages.[8] This edition shifted headache taxonomy from descriptive narratives to structured, evidence-based frameworks, enabling consistent application in diverse settings. The second edition, ICHD-2, published in 2004 as a 160-page supplement in Cephalalgia, significantly expanded the classification to 259 diagnoses across 14 major groups, reflecting 16 years of accumulated clinical data and research feedback from ICHD-1 implementations.[8][13] It refined the primary/secondary distinction with more precise criteria, introduced appendices for provisional research diagnoses (such as chronic migraine defined as 15 headache days per month), and integrated advances in neuroimaging and genetics to validate subtypes like familial hemiplegic migraine.[4] Available online via the IHS website and translated into multiple languages, ICHD-2 enhanced utility for both clinical practice and epidemiological studies, solidifying the ICHD as the global benchmark for headache disorders.[8]Evolution to ICHD-3
The development of the third edition of the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-3) was initiated by the Headache Classification Committee of the International Headache Society (IHS), with its first meeting held in September 2009 in Philadelphia.[14] Chaired by Jes Olesen and with Timothy J. Steiner as secretary, the committee comprised 18 members, including four with prior experience from earlier editions, organized into working groups focused on specific headache types.[4] Revisions continued through 2017, incorporating input from the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) on cranial nerve and facial pain classifications, and drawing on over a decade of advancing research in areas such as genetics, neuroimaging, and pathophysiology.[7] This process emphasized evidence-based updates, integrating findings from numerous studies on headache mechanisms, including nitric oxide donors and MRI-based observations of grey matter changes in conditions like hypnic headache.[7] A beta version of ICHD-3 was released in 2013 to facilitate global field testing, enabling researchers worldwide to evaluate and refine diagnostic criteria through clinical studies and surveys.[7] Notable field-testing efforts included assessments of migraine with aura criteria, which showed improved performance when using appendix formulations over main criteria; cluster headache; idiopathic intracranial hypertension; primary stabbing headache; and vestibular migraine, with prevalence data indicating 10.3% among Chinese migraine patients.[7] These international validations, published in journals like Cephalalgia, informed adjustments to enhance sensitivity and specificity, such as modifying trigeminal neuralgia criteria to better align with clinical observations.[15] The iterative process addressed limitations from prior editions, like overly restrictive chronic migraine definitions in ICHD-2, by promoting broader adoption of tested criteria.[4] ICHD-3 introduced over 300 distinct headache diagnoses, expanding significantly from ICHD-2's structure while maintaining a hierarchical format.[16] Key innovations included new chapters on painful cranial neuropathies, other facial pain, and trigeminal neuralgia (Chapters 13 and 14), which provided detailed criteria for conditions previously underrepresented.[7] Migraine subtypes were refined, with chronic migraine (1.3) elevated to a primary subform under migraine, featuring updated criteria emphasizing headache frequency over 15 days per month for more than 3 months, including at least 8 days with migrainous features.[4] Criteria for medication-overuse headache (8.2) were enhanced to specify overuse thresholds for different drug classes, improving diagnostic precision for this common secondary headache.[7] New daily persistent headache was classified as 4.4, with criteria based on abrupt onset and unremitting daily pain lasting over 3 months. Appendices were expanded for other emerging entities offering provisional criteria.[7][17] The classification was harmonized with the World Health Organization's ICD-11 through close collaboration, ensuring near-complete congruence in headache coding for global health reporting.[4] All updates were grounded in evidence from hundreds of studies, prioritizing high-impact research on pathophysiology and genetics to replace opinion-based elements with validated data.[7] ICHD-3 was released online in November 2017, with the full 184-page document published in the January 2018 issue of Cephalalgia (volume 38, issue 1), marking 30 years since ICHD-1.[18] An interactive digital version is available at ichd-3.org, facilitating clinical use through searchable criteria and translations.[18]Ongoing Work Toward ICHD-4
As of November 2025, the development of the International Classification of Headache Disorders, fourth edition (ICHD-4), is actively underway, led by the International Headache Society (IHS) Classification Committee. The committee has initiated a call for contributions through a dedicated topical collection in Cephalalgia titled "Toward International Classification of Headache Disorders – 4 (ICHD-4)," launched in July 2025 and open to submissions from experts worldwide.[19] This follows a series of "work in progress" publications in Cephalalgia from 2024 to 2025, which outline key challenges and preliminary discussions for the revision.[20] Among the key proposals under consideration are the potential inclusion of acute confusional migraine as a distinct entity within the migraine chapter, based on a formal submission in August 2025 that highlights its unique clinical features and diagnostic implications.[21] Refinements to criteria for medication-overuse headache are also being explored, drawing from recent studies on its prevalence and overlap with other primary headaches, such as in cluster headache populations.[22] Similarly, updates to trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias aim to better align International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD) criteria with those from the International Classification of Orofacial Pain (ICOP), addressing phenotypic overlaps informed by new clinical trials.[23] The timeline for ICHD-4 anticipates publication in the coming years, building on feedback from the ICHD-3 beta version and incorporating evidence from studies conducted between 2018 and 2025, including network analyses that reveal interconnectivities among headache diagnoses to refine the hierarchical structure.[24] These updates emphasize empirical data from global research to enhance diagnostic precision without disrupting established classifications. Challenges in the process include balancing the introduction of novel headache entities—such as those emerging from post-pandemic observations—with the need for classificatory stability to support clinical and research consistency. The IHS facilitates global collaboration through its network of national affiliates, ensuring diverse inputs shape the final edition.Structure and Methodology
Hierarchical Organization
The International Classification of Headache Disorders, third edition (ICHD-3), employs a hierarchical alphanumeric numbering system to organize headache disorders systematically, allowing for diagnoses ranging from broad categories to highly specific subtypes. This structure uses up to five levels of codes, where the first digit denotes the major category (e.g., 1 for migraine), subsequent digits specify subcategories (e.g., 1.2 for migraine with aura), and further digits refine to particular variants (e.g., 1.2.3 for hemiplegic migraine).[7] Such coding facilitates precise communication among clinicians and researchers by progressing from general to specific classifications.[7] At the top level, ICHD-3 is divided into three main parts encompassing 14 major categories. Part 1 covers primary headaches (codes 1-4), including migraine (1), tension-type headache (2), trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias (3), and other primary headache disorders (4). Part 2 addresses secondary headaches (codes 5-12), such as those attributed to trauma or injury (5), cranial or cervical vascular disorders (6), non-vascular intracranial disorders (7), substances or their withdrawal (8), infection (9), disorders of homeostasis (10), cranial or neck disorders (11), and psychiatric disorders (12). Part 3 includes painful cranial neuropathies, other facial pains, and other headaches (codes 13-14), with 13 for painful lesions of cranial nerves and other facial pain, and 14 for other headache disorders.[7] This organization prioritizes primary headaches first, followed by secondary causes that may require urgent investigation, and finally less common neuralgic or miscellaneous conditions.[7] The hierarchical principles emphasize a stepwise diagnostic approach, starting with the highest applicable level and descending only as evidence supports greater specificity, thereby accommodating incomplete information in clinical settings. For cases where full criteria are not met but the diagnosis is likely, "probable" designations are incorporated at various levels (e.g., 1.5 for probable migraine or 4.10.1 for probable new daily persistent headache), enabling provisional classifications without overdiagnosis.[7] Additionally, appendices house entities requiring further validation, such as novel headache types or alternative criteria, coded with an "A" prefix (e.g., A1 for migraine variants under study), to support ongoing research without integrating unproven disorders into the main classification.[7] ICHD-3 aligns with broader medical coding systems through cross-references to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10 and ICD-11), providing mappings that enhance interoperability; for instance, migraine disorders under code 1 correspond to ICD-10 category G43, while secondary headaches like those from vascular causes (6) map to I60-I69. This integration allows ICHD-3's detailed granularity—far exceeding ICD's broader groupings—to inform epidemiological and billing applications without redundancy.[7]Diagnostic Criteria and General Rules
The diagnostic criteria in the International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition (ICHD-3), follow a standardized hierarchical format to ensure consistency and reliability across all headache types. This structure typically consists of criteria labeled A, B, and C, with occasional additional criteria D or E, all of which must be fulfilled for a definite diagnosis. Criterion A describes the presence of the headache or its key defining feature, such as "at least five attacks fulfilling criteria B and C" for migraine. Criterion B specifies essential characteristics, including duration (e.g., 4–72 hours untreated for migraine) or the occurrence of an underlying disorder (e.g., traumatic injury to the head). Criterion C outlines accompanying symptoms or evidence of causation, often requiring the headache to exhibit at least two specific characteristics, such as unilateral location, pulsating quality, moderate or severe pain intensity, or aggravation by routine physical activity. An exclusion criterion, typically D or E, ensures the headache is "not better accounted for by another ICHD-3 diagnosis," thereby ruling out alternative explanations. General diagnostic rules emphasize the primacy of excluding secondary headaches before assigning primary diagnoses, as secondary headaches may mimic primary ones and require urgent intervention. Clinicians must first investigate potential underlying causes through clinical history, neurological examination, and, where indicated, neuroimaging such as MRI or CT, particularly for new-onset, thunderclap, or progressively worsening headaches. Key features like headache duration, frequency (e.g., at least five lifetime attacks for episodic migraine or 15 days per month for chronic forms), and location (e.g., unilateral for cluster headache) serve as foundational elements in the criteria to differentiate headache types. For secondary headaches, a temporal relationship to the causative disorder is mandatory, with the headache developing, worsening, or improving in parallel with the disorder's onset, progression, or resolution; neuroimaging and other tests are required to confirm this link and exclude mimics. The classification also includes provisions for "probable" diagnoses when all but one criterion are met and no alternative explanation exists, such as probable migraine (code 1.5) for cases with incomplete data that warrant further observation rather than dismissal. Notes and comments appended to criteria provide rationale, clinical caveats, and research gaps, such as adjustments for pediatric durations or the need for diagnostic diaries in complex cases. The evidence basis for ICHD-3 criteria derives from a combination of expert consensus via Delphi methods, prospective validation studies, and field testing conducted by the International Headache Society (IHS). Criteria were refined through iterative beta versions (e.g., ICHD-3 beta from 2013–2017), incorporating data from large-scale clinical evaluations to achieve high sensitivity and specificity, as demonstrated in studies like those validating migraine subtypes with over 90% diagnostic accuracy. Updates to criteria require robust Level 1 evidence, such as randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or prospective cohort studies, to substantiate changes; for instance, revisions to trigeminal autonomic cephalalgia criteria were supported by RCTs confirming attack patterns. Where high-level evidence is lacking, criteria rely on expert opinion but are flagged as "insufficiently studied," prompting ongoing research. This rigorous approach ensures the classification's applicability in clinical practice and research, with hierarchical codes (e.g., 1. Migraine) briefly referenced to integrate criteria within the broader taxonomy.[25]Primary Headaches
Migraine
Migraine is classified as 1. Migraine in the International Classification of Headache Disorders, third edition (ICHD-3), representing a primary headache disorder characterized by recurrent attacks of headache that typically last 4-72 hours if untreated or unsuccessfully treated. The headache is usually unilateral, pulsating in quality, and of moderate or severe intensity, often aggravated by routine physical activity, and accompanied by nausea, vomiting, photophobia, or phonophobia. Globally, migraine affects approximately 14-15% of the population, making it one of the most common neurological disorders and a leading cause of disability.[26] The ICHD-3 delineates several subtypes of migraine based on clinical features and duration. Migraine without aura (1.1) is the most common form, diagnosed when a patient experiences at least five attacks fulfilling specific criteria: headache lasting 4-72 hours; unilateral location, pulsating quality, moderate or severe pain intensity, and aggravation by routine physical activity; and during the headache, at least one of nausea/vomiting or photophobia/phonophobia.[27] Migraine with aura (1.2) requires at least two attacks with one or more fully reversible aura symptoms, including visual, sensory, speech/language, motor, brainstem, or retinal disturbances; aura symptoms spread gradually over ≥5 minutes, with two or more occurring in succession, each lasting 5-60 minutes, and often followed by headache within 60 minutes. Subforms include typical aura (1.2.1), brainstem aura (1.2.2), hemiplegic migraine (1.2.3, which includes motor weakness and has genetic links, such as in familial hemiplegic migraine where at least one first-degree relative is affected), and retinal migraine (1.2.4).[28] Chronic migraine (1.3) is distinguished by its frequency, occurring on ≥15 days per month for >3 months, with headache on at least 8 days per month fulfilling criteria for migraine without aura or migraine with aura, typically in individuals with a prior diagnosis of episodic migraine.[29] Complications of migraine (1.4) encompass status migrainosus (1.4.1, a debilitating attack lasting >72 hours despite treatment), persistent aura without infarction (1.4.2, aura symptoms lasting >1 week without neuroimaging evidence of infarction), migrainous infarction (1.4.3, one or more aura symptoms associated with an ischemic stroke), and migraine aura-triggered seizure (1.4.4). Probable migraine (1.5) applies when attacks fulfill all but one criterion for a migraine subtype, while 1.6 covers episodic syndromes associated with migraine, such as cyclical vomiting syndrome and abdominal migraine in children. Diagnostic criteria emphasize that aura symptoms must be fully reversible and typically develop gradually, distinguishing migraine from other primary headaches like tension-type headache, which lacks unilateral pulsating pain and associated autonomic features. Migraine corresponds to ICD-10 code G43, with subcodes such as G43.0 for migraine without aura and G43.1 for migraine with aura.[30] Genetic factors play a role, particularly in subtypes like familial hemiplegic migraine, which involves specific ion channel mutations.Tension-Type Headache
Tension-type headache (TTH), classified as 2. in the International Classification of Headache Disorders, third edition (ICHD-3), is the most prevalent primary headache disorder, characterized by episodes of bilateral, pressing or tightening (non-pulsating) pain of mild or moderate intensity that lacks associated nausea or vomiting.[31] These headaches typically last from 30 minutes to 7 days and are not aggravated by routine physical activity, distinguishing them from more severe primary headaches.[32] The lifetime prevalence of TTH in the general population ranges from 30% to 78% across studies, making it a significant contributor to global headache burden.[31] Common triggers include emotional stress, fatigue, and poor posture, which may exacerbate pericranial muscle tension.[33] In clinical coding, TTH corresponds to ICD-10 code G44.2. It frequently coexists with migraine, with comorbidity rates influenced by shared risk factors such as anxiety and depression.[34] ICHD-3 delineates four main subtypes of TTH based on frequency and chronicity. Infrequent episodic TTH (2.1) involves at least 10 episodes occurring on fewer than 1 day per month on average (<12 days/year), often manageable without intervention.[32] Frequent episodic TTH (2.2) features at least 10 episodes on 1-14 days per month for more than 3 months (≥12 and <180 days/year), transitioning toward a more disruptive pattern.[32] Chronic TTH (2.3), the most debilitating form, occurs on 15 or more days per month for more than 3 months (≥180 days/year) and may be unremitting, with a global prevalence of 2-3%.[32][35] Probable TTH (2.4) applies when headaches meet all but one criterion for a definite subtype, serving as a provisional diagnosis.[32] Diagnosis of TTH requires fulfillment of specific criteria to exclude secondary causes and other primary headaches, emphasizing the absence of aura, pronounced autonomic features, or systemic symptoms.[31] For episodic forms (2.1 and 2.2), at least two of the following must be present: bilateral location, pressing/tightening quality, mild or moderate intensity, and no aggravation by routine physical activity; additionally, no nausea or vomiting, and no more than one of photophobia or phonophobia.[32] Chronic TTH shares these but allows mild nausea and adjusts phonophobia/photophobia tolerance, with headaches lasting hours to days or continuously.[32] The headache must not be better accounted for by another ICHD-3 diagnosis, ensuring accurate classification within the primary headache hierarchy.[31]Trigeminal Autonomic Cephalalgias
Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias (TACs) are a group of primary headache disorders classified under section 3 of the International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition (ICHD-3), characterized by attacks of severe, unilateral pain in the trigeminal nerve distribution (typically V1 or V2 divisions) accompanied by prominent ipsilateral cranial parasympathetic autonomic symptoms, such as conjunctival injection, lacrimation, nasal congestion, rhinorrhoea, forehead or facial sweating, miosis, ptosis, or eyelid oedema.[7] These disorders arise from activation of the trigeminal-parasympathetic reflex, often with involvement of the hypothalamus, as evidenced by neuroimaging studies showing activation in the posterior hypothalamic grey matter and the circadian rhythmicity of attacks.[7] Unlike longer-duration headaches such as migraine, TAC attacks are brief and excruciating, leading to significant distress and restlessness during episodes.[7] The TACs are distinguished by their short attack durations, ranging from seconds to hours, and high frequency, which can occur up to several times per day or even hundreds of times in some subtypes.[7] This group falls under ICD-10 code G44.0 for cluster headaches and other trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias.[30] Diagnosis relies on strict criteria emphasizing unilateral pain location, autonomic features, and attack patterns, with secondary TACs excluded if better attributed to another underlying disorder.[7]Subtypes of Trigeminal Autonomic Cephalalgias
The ICHD-3 delineates five subtypes of TACs, each with specific diagnostic criteria focusing on pain intensity, duration, frequency, and autonomic involvement.[7] These include episodic and chronic forms where applicable, defined by the presence or absence of remission periods lasting at least one month.[7] The following table summarizes the key characteristics of each subtype:| Subtype | Pain Characteristics | Duration | Frequency | Autonomic Symptoms | Key Diagnostic Features and Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3.1 Cluster Headache | Severe, strictly unilateral orbital, supraorbital, temporal, or any combination; patients often exhibit restlessness or agitation. | 15–180 minutes (untreated) | 0.5–8 per day | Ipsilateral conjunctival injection or lacrimation; nasal congestion or rhinorrhoea; forehead or facial sweating; miosis or ptosis; eyelid oedema. At least one required. | At least five attacks fulfilling criteria for unilateral pain, autonomic symptoms or agitation, and frequency; not better accounted for by another diagnosis. Male predominance (ratio approximately 3:1); onset typically 20–40 years; hypothalamic activation linked to nocturnal attacks; highly responsive to 100% oxygen inhalation (7–12 L/min for 15–20 minutes), serving as a diagnostic and therapeutic clue.[7][36] |
| 3.2 Paroxysmal Hemicrania | Severe unilateral, often periorbital or temporal. | 2–30 minutes | ≥5 per day (often 10–20) for >50% of the time. | Ipsilateral as in cluster headache; at least one required. | At least 20 attacks with unilateral pain, autonomic symptoms, high frequency, and absolute prevention by therapeutic doses of indomethacin (typically 25–300 mg/day); no male predominance; onset in adulthood. Episodic and chronic forms distinguished by remission periods.[7] |
| 3.3 Short-Lasting Unilateral Neuralgiform Headache Attacks (SUNCT/SUNA) | Moderate to severe unilateral, often orbital, supraorbital, or temporal; stabbing or sharp quality, often triggered by cutaneous stimuli. | 1–600 seconds (1 second to 10 minutes). | Up to several hundred per day; ≥1 per day for >50% of the time. | For SUNCT: ipsilateral conjunctival injection and lacrimation (both required). For SUNA: at least one cranial autonomic symptom (as in cluster headache). | At least 20 attacks with unilateral pain, autonomic features, triggerability, and frequency; no refractory period post-attack, distinguishing from trigeminal neuralgia. Hypothalamic involvement noted; often treatment-resistant. Episodic and chronic forms.[7] |
| 3.4 Hemicrania Continua | Continuous unilateral side-locked pain (moderate, with severe exacerbations), often with migrainous features like photophobia. | Continuous (>3 months), with exacerbations lasting days to weeks. | Constant baseline with superimposed bouts. | Ipsilateral autonomic symptoms or agitation during exacerbations only; at least one required. | Unilateral headache with exacerbations, autonomic features during exacerbations, and absolute indomethacin responsiveness; rare remitting form with periods ≥24 hours pain-free. Hypothalamic overlap with other TACs.[7] |
| 3.5 Probable Trigeminal Autonomic Cephalalgia | Features resembling one of the above TACs but incomplete. | Varies by suspected subtype. | Varies by suspected subtype. | Varies by suspected subtype. | Fulfills all but one criterion for a specific TAC subtype (e.g., probable cluster headache); not better explained by another ICHD-3 diagnosis. Provisional until full criteria met.[7] |
Other Primary Headaches
Other primary headache disorders encompass a heterogeneous group of conditions classified under chapter 4 of the International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition (ICHD-3), comprising headaches that do not align with migraine, tension-type headache, or trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias and lack an identifiable underlying structural, vascular, or systemic cause.[7] These disorders are generally rare, with an overall prevalence estimated at less than 1% among headache patients in clinical settings, and they are often self-limiting, resolving spontaneously or with minimal intervention.[7] Diagnosis requires rigorous exclusion of secondary causes through clinical history, neuroimaging (e.g., MRI or CT), and other investigations, as many presentations mimic serious pathologies; they correspond to ICD-10 code G44.80 for other primary headaches.[30] Key diagnostic features include recurrent episodes triggered by specific stimuli, absence of nausea, photophobia, or autonomic symptoms, and adherence to precise temporal and symptomatic criteria outlined in ICHD-3.[7] Primary cough headache (4.1) is characterized by sudden-onset, bilateral pain in the posterior head triggered by coughing, straining, or Valsalva maneuvers, lasting from less than 1 second to 30 minutes per episode.[7] It is typically severe but self-resolves within weeks to months, affecting older adults more commonly, with a prevalence below 1% in headache clinics.[7] Diagnostic criteria mandate that the headache is brought on by and occurs only in association with the trigger, with no better explanation from another disorder after excluding structural issues like Chiari malformation via neuroimaging.[7] Probable primary cough headache (4.1.1) applies to cases meeting most but not all criteria.[7] Primary exercise headache (4.2) manifests as pulsating, moderate-to-severe pain during or immediately after strenuous physical activity, such as running or weightlifting, with episodes lasting 5 minutes to 48 hours.[7] It often recurs with repeated exertion and may be exacerbated by hot weather or high altitude, though prevalence data are limited due to its infrequency.[7] Criteria require the headache to be associated exclusively with exercise and not attributable to other causes, such as subarachnoid hemorrhage or arterial dissection, which necessitate urgent vascular imaging for differentiation.[7] The probable variant (4.2.1) is used for incomplete fulfillment of these standards.[7] Primary headache associated with sexual activity (4.3) is characterized by dull bilateral headache developing during sexual arousal and abruptly increasing in intensity at orgasm, lasting from 1 minute to 24 hours with severe intensity or up to 72 hours with mild pain.[37] It can be pre-orgasmic (gradual buildup) or orgasmic (sudden at climax), often bilateral but may be unilateral, and occurs at least twice precipitated by sexual activity. Diagnosis requires exclusion of secondary causes such as subarachnoid hemorrhage or arterial dissection via urgent neuroimaging and lumbar puncture if needed; it may respond to indomethacin in pre-orgasmic form. Probable primary headache associated with sexual activity (4.3.1) applies when criteria are mostly but not fully met.[38] Primary thunderclap headache (4.4), a benign form of abrupt-onset severe headache peaking within 60 seconds and lasting at least 1 hour, differs from its secondary counterparts by lacking an identifiable cause after thorough evaluation.[7] It presents as explosive, diffuse pain without specific triggers, often mimicking life-threatening conditions like aneurysmal rupture, and requires immediate neuroimaging and lumbar puncture to rule out vascular or infectious etiologies.[7] Episodes are recurrent in about 25% of cases and typically resolve within weeks, with no established prevalence but noted rarity in emergency settings.[7] The probable subtype (4.4.1) accommodates cases not fully meeting duration or recurrence criteria.[7] Primary stabbing headache (4.7) involves transient, sharp jabs of pain lasting 1-10 seconds (up to 120 seconds rarely), occurring sporadically as single or serial stabs in a fixed or varying head location, without consistent triggers.[7] It is more prevalent among individuals with migraine, though exact rates are undocumented, and is generally benign and self-limiting.[7] Diagnosis hinges on the ultra-brief duration and exclusion of intracranial lesions or neuralgias via imaging if the pattern is atypical.[7] The probable form (4.7.1) applies to uncertain cases.[7] Additional subtypes include cold-stimulus headache (4.5), triggered by ingestion of cold foods or external cold exposure, causing brief frontal or temporal pain resolving within 30 minutes; external compression headache (4.6), from tight headgear or traction, persisting up to 48 hours post-removal; nummular headache (4.8), a chronic, coin-shaped area of mild pressing pain on the scalp lasting days to years; and hypnic headache (4.9), a dull, sleep-related pain awakening patients nightly for 15 minutes to 4 hours, typically in those over 50.[7] New daily persistent headache (4.10) features abrupt onset of continuous daily pain reminiscent of migraine or tension-type headache, persisting over 3 months with a memorable start date.[7] Each requires specific trigger association, temporal limits, and exclusion of alternatives, with probable variants (e.g., 4.5.1-4.10.1) for partial matches.[7] These conditions highlight the ICHD-3's hierarchical approach by grouping trigger-based primaries separately from more common categories.[7]Secondary Headaches
Attributed to Head and Neck Trauma
Headaches attributed to trauma or injury to the head and/or neck represent a significant category of secondary headaches in the International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition (ICHD-3), classified under section 5. These headaches arise as a direct consequence of mechanical injury to the head, neck, or cranial structures, distinguishing them from primary headaches by their clear temporal and causal link to the trauma. They are among the most common secondary headache disorders, particularly following traumatic brain injury (TBI), with prevalence estimates indicating that 30-50% of individuals experience headache symptoms acutely after mild TBI or concussion. The condition is coded under ICD-10 as G44.3 for post-traumatic headache.[39][40][41] The underlying mechanisms involve a combination of direct tissue damage and secondary pathophysiological processes. Trauma often results in diffuse axonal injury due to shearing forces that stretch, distort, or rupture neuronal axons, leading to neuroinflammation, disrupted neurotransmitter balance, and sensitization of pain pathways in the trigeminovascular system. Additional contributors include meningeal irritation, muscle tension from neck injury, and alterations in cerebral blood flow or autoregulation, which can exacerbate headache development. These processes are more pronounced in moderate to severe TBI but can occur even in mild cases without overt structural damage.[42][43] ICHD-3 delineates acute and persistent forms based on duration: acute headaches last up to 3 months after onset, while persistent (chronic) headaches continue beyond 3 months. For both, the headache must develop within 7 days of the injury (or regaining consciousness, or cessation of amnesia/medication effects impairing assessment) and cannot be better explained by another diagnosis. The headache characteristics are not strictly defined but commonly resemble those of migraine or tension-type headache, often improving as the patient recovers from the trauma. Evidence of causation is supported by the close temporal relation, and resolution or significant improvement with recovery from the injury further confirms the attribution.[32] Subtypes are organized by the nature and severity of the trauma:- 5.1 Acute headache attributed to traumatic injury to the head: This includes headaches following moderate or severe TBI (5.1.1), defined by criteria such as loss of consciousness >30 minutes, Glasgow Coma Scale score <13, post-traumatic amnesia >24 hours, or neuroimaging evidence of lesions like skull fracture or intracranial hemorrhage; and mild TBI (5.1.2), lacking these features but involving head impact or acceleration/deceleration forces. Both require headache onset within 7 days and persistence ≤3 months.[32]
- 5.2 Persistent headache attributed to traumatic injury to the head: Similar to 5.1 but lasting >3 months, subdivided into moderate/severe (5.2.1) and mild (5.2.2) based on injury severity. These chronic forms affect approximately 10-30% of TBI cases and may involve ongoing central sensitization or psychological factors.[32][40]
- 5.3 Acute headache attributed to whiplash injury: Headache developing within 7 days of whiplash-associated disorder (typically from rapid neck flexion-extension), accompanied by neck pain, and resolving ≤3 months. Whiplash often involves cervical muscle strain or zygapophysial joint injury contributing to referred pain.[32]
- 5.4 Persistent headache attributed to whiplash injury: Identical to 5.3 but persisting >3 months, highlighting cases where initial musculoskeletal damage leads to chronic nociceptive input.[32]
- 5.5 Acute headache attributed to craniotomy: Headache arising within 7 days post-craniotomy (surgical trauma to the skull), lasting ≤3 months, often due to dural irritation or surgical site inflammation.[32]
- 5.6 Persistent headache attributed to craniotomy: Same as 5.5 but >3 months, potentially linked to scar tissue formation or persistent dural sensitivity.[32]
Attributed to Vascular Disorders
Headaches attributed to cranial or cervical vascular disorders are classified under section 6 of the International Classification of Headache Disorders, third edition (ICHD-3), encompassing secondary headaches arising from ischemic events, hemorrhages, arteritis, or other vascular pathologies in the cranial or cervical regions.[32] These headaches typically emerge in close temporal relation to the underlying vascular disorder and require urgent clinical evaluation to prevent severe complications such as stroke or death.[44] The classification emphasizes that a new-onset headache in this context is coded as secondary, while significant worsening of a pre-existing headache may warrant a dual diagnosis.[32] The general diagnostic criteria for these headaches, as outlined in ICHD-3, include: (A) any new headache fulfilling criteria C and D; (B) a vascular disorder known to cause headache has been diagnosed; (C) evidence of causation demonstrated by at least one of the following: headache has developed in temporal relation to onset or worsening of the vascular disorder, or the headache has significantly worsened in parallel with the vascular disorder, or the headache has characteristics typical of the vascular disorder; and (D) not better accounted for by another ICHD-3 diagnosis.[32] These criteria underscore the need for neuroimaging, such as CT angiography or MR angiography, to confirm the vascular pathology and exclude mimics.[44] Subtypes under ICHD-3 section 6 are organized by the specific vascular mechanism:- 6.1 Headache attributed to cerebral ischaemic event: Includes acute headache accompanying ischaemic stroke or transient ischaemic attack, often diffuse and moderate to severe, resolving within days to weeks post-event.[32]
- 6.2 Headache attributed to non-traumatic intracranial haemorrhage: Encompasses subarachnoid haemorrhage (often thunderclap onset, maximal within 1 minute and lasting hours), intracerebral haemorrhage, and intraventricular haemorrhage, with headache persisting or recurring until the haemorrhage stabilizes.[32]
- 6.3 Headache attributed to unruptured vascular malformation: Features chronic or recurrent headaches linked to unruptured saccular aneurysms or arteriovenous malformations, potentially migraine-like.[32]
- 6.4 Headache attributed to arteritis: Covers giant cell arteritis and other forms, with new persistent headache often unilateral and temporal, accompanied by systemic symptoms; erythrocyte sedimentation rate elevation supports diagnosis.[45]
- 6.5 Headache attributed to cervical carotid or vertebral artery disorder: Involves dissection or other non-inflammatory lesions, presenting as acute ipsilateral headache or neck pain, sometimes with Horner's syndrome.[46]
- 6.6 Headache attributed to cranial venous disorder (non-infectious): Includes cerebral venous thrombosis, with subacute onset headache worsening with recumbency, often associated with papilloedema.[32]
- 6.7 Headache attributed to other acute intracranial arterial disorder: Features thunderclap headache in conditions like reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome (RCVS), reaching maximum intensity within 1 minute and resolving within 3 months.
- 6.8 Headache attributed to genetic or other chronic intracranial vasculopathy: Recurrent migraine-like attacks in disorders such as cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL).[32]
- 6.9 Headache attributed to pituitary apoplexy: Sudden severe headache with endocrine or visual symptoms due to pituitary haemorrhage or infarction.[32]