Definition of Syndrome, Raeder's
Syndrome, Raeder's: A
distinctive syndrome of headaches, also known as cluster
headache or migrainous neuralgia. The common pattern of
cluster headache is termed "episodic" and is characterized
by 1-3 short attacks of pain each day around the eyes,
clustered over a stretch of 1-2 months, followed by a pain-
free breathing period (average: a year). The other main
pattern of cluster headache is termed "chronic" (and is
also known as chronic migrainous neuralgia). It may come
out of the blue or emerge several years after an episodic
pattern. It is characterized by the absence of sustained
periods of remission. The episodic and acute forms of
cluster headache may transform into the other, so it is
clear that they are merely different-appearing patterns of
one and the same disease. On the other hand, cluster
headache looks different and distinct from migraine-for
example, propranolol is effective for migraine but not
cluster headache while lithium benefits cluster headache
syndrome but not migraine-although the mechanisms
underlying cluster headache and migraine may have a degree
of commonality. Cluster headache has gone by a bevy of
other names including sphenopalatine neuralgia, ciliary
neuralgia, vidian neuralgia, erythroprosopalgia and
histamine cephalalgia.
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