Hemicrania Continua
Hemicrania continua (HC) is a continuous, strictly unilateral headache of fluctuating intensity with superimposed exacerbations accompanied by ipsilateral autonomic features and/or restlessness. Like paroxysmal hemicrania, HC has an absolute response to indomethacin, which is required for diagnosis. Despite being classified as a TAC in the ICHD-3, HC has features that overlap with both migraine (migrainous features during exacerbations) and other TACs (autonomic features), making it a diagnostic challenge that is frequently misdiagnosed as chronic migraine or chronic TTH.
Bottom Line
- Continuous unilateral headache that never shifts sides, present for >3 months, with fluctuating intensity
- Exacerbations are accompanied by at least one ipsilateral autonomic feature (lacrimation, conjunctival injection, nasal congestion, ptosis) AND/OR restlessness/agitation
- Migrainous features (photophobia, phonophobia, nausea) often present during exacerbations — a major source of misdiagnosis as chronic migraine
- Absolute indomethacin response is diagnostic (ICHD-3 criterion). Complete resolution at therapeutic doses.
- Key clue: Continuous strictly side-locked headache that never switches sides. Migraine and TTH typically alternate sides over months/years.
- Estimated to be present in 1-2% of chronic daily headache patients — underdiagnosed because indomethacin trials are not routinely performed
ICHD-3 Criteria
- A. Unilateral headache fulfilling B-D
- B. Present for >3 months, with exacerbations of moderate or greater intensity
- C. Either or both:
- At least one ipsilateral autonomic feature with exacerbations: conjunctival injection, lacrimation, nasal congestion, rhinorrhea, forehead sweating, miosis, ptosis, eyelid edema
- Restlessness or agitation, OR worsening with movement
- D. Responds absolutely to therapeutic doses of indomethacin
- E. Not better accounted for by another ICHD-3 diagnosis
Subtypes
| Subtype |
Pattern |
| HC with remissions (3.4.1) |
Headache is not daily; there are pain-free periods of ≥24 hours without treatment |
| HC without remissions (3.4.2) |
Headache is daily and continuous for ≥1 year without pain-free periods of ≥24 hours. More common form. |
Clinical Features
Baseline Pain
- Continuous mild-to-moderate unilateral head pain. Patients describe it as an ever-present “awareness” or dull ache on one side.
- Strictly side-locked: The headache never switches sides. This is a critical diagnostic feature. In clinical series, side-locking is the single most distinguishing characteristic from chronic migraine.
- Location: Periorbital, temporal, or frontotemporal most common. Can extend to occipital region ipsilaterally.
Exacerbations
- Moderate to severe intensity flares superimposed on the continuous baseline. Frequency varies from multiple per day to a few per week.
- Duration: Minutes to days
- Autonomic features appear during exacerbations: ipsilateral lacrimation, conjunctival injection, ptosis, miosis, nasal congestion, rhinorrhea, facial flushing/sweating
- Migrainous features are common during exacerbations: nausea (in ~50%), photophobia, phonophobia. This frequently leads to misdiagnosis as chronic migraine.
- Jabs and jolts: Brief ice-pick-like stabs superimposed on the continuous pain are reported in ~40% of HC patients
Diagnostic Approach
When to Suspect Hemicrania Continua
- Continuous unilateral headache that has never switched sides, even over months or years
- Diagnosed as “refractory chronic migraine” but has not responded to typical migraine preventives (beta-blockers, topiramate, CGRP mAbs, Botox)
- Mild autonomic features during exacerbations (even subtle — mild tearing, slight nasal stuffiness, or barely noticeable ptosis)
- Patient describes a constant background headache with superimposed flares, rather than discrete migraine attacks with pain-free intervals
- Rule of thumb: Any strictly side-locked continuous headache deserves an indomethacin trial before concluding it is chronic migraine
The Indomethacin Trial
- Protocol: Same as for paroxysmal hemicrania — 25 mg TID × 3 days → 50 mg TID × 3 days → 75 mg TID × 7 days
- Expected response: Complete resolution of both baseline pain and exacerbations. The response is typically dramatic and occurs within 24-48 hours of reaching the effective dose.
- Partial response is not sufficient for diagnosis. HC patients should become pain-free on indomethacin.
- IM indomethacin test: 50-100 mg IM; response within 30-60 minutes (useful for rapid diagnosis in uncertain cases)
- Indo-negative HC-like headache: If the clinical features are classic but indomethacin response is absent or partial, the patient does not meet ICHD-3 criteria. Consider: chronic migraine (more likely), cervicogenic headache, new daily persistent headache, or undifferentiated continuous headache.
Differentiating HC from Chronic Migraine
| Feature |
Hemicrania Continua |
Chronic Migraine |
| Laterality |
Strictly side-locked (never changes sides) |
May alternate sides or be bilateral |
| Temporal pattern |
Continuous with exacerbations |
Discrete attacks (though can feel near-daily in CM) |
| Pain-free intervals |
None (in chronic form) or brief |
Usually present between attacks |
| Autonomic features |
Present during exacerbations (defining feature) |
May occur but not defining |
| Indomethacin |
Absolute response |
No specific response |
| Triptan response |
None or minimal |
Yes (acute attacks respond) |
| Botox / CGRP mAb response |
No |
Yes (chronic migraine-specific preventives) |
| Jabs and jolts |
Common (~40%) |
Less common |
Treatment
Indomethacin (First-Line)
- Maintenance: After complete response, titrate down to the lowest effective dose (typically 25-75 mg/day). Some patients need as little as 25 mg/day; others require 150 mg/day or more.
- Long-term use: Most HC patients (especially chronic form) require indefinite treatment. Periodic reassessment by brief dose reduction.
- GI protection: Mandatory PPI co-prescription (omeprazole 20 mg or equivalent) for all patients on maintenance therapy.
- Monitoring: Renal function (Cr) and blood pressure every 6-12 months. CBC annually.
When Indomethacin Is Not Tolerated
The following have been reported as partial alternatives (none are as reliable as indomethacin):
| Alternative |
Evidence |
Notes |
| Celecoxib 200-400 mg/day |
Case series; partial responses |
COX-2 selective; better GI profile. Not as complete as indomethacin. |
| Melatonin 3-15 mg |
Case reports; occasional complete responses |
Very safe; worth trying. Mechanism may relate to COX-2 inhibition. |
| Topiramate 100-200 mg/day |
Case series; partial benefit |
Third-line option |
| Verapamil 240-480 mg/day |
Rare case reports of partial response |
May help exacerbation frequency |
| GON block with steroid |
Case series; temporary benefit |
Can provide weeks of relief; useful as bridge |
| OnabotulinumtoxinA |
Occasional case reports of partial benefit |
Not consistently effective; trial may be reasonable in indomethacin-intolerant patients |
| Occipital nerve stimulation |
Small case series; positive results in refractory HC |
Reserved for patients who cannot tolerate indomethacin and have failed alternatives |
Important Considerations
- MRI brain is mandatory to exclude secondary causes. Symptomatic HC has been reported with posterior fossa tumors, pituitary lesions, cavernous sinus pathology, and HIV
- HC may be underdiagnosed in chronic daily headache clinics. Series suggest 1-2% of chronic daily headache patients have HC when systematically tested with indomethacin.
- If a patient with “refractory chronic migraine” has strictly side-locked pain and has never had an indomethacin trial, this should be done before declaring the patient refractory
- HC can coexist with migraine — indomethacin will resolve the HC component but not migraine attacks, which may need separate treatment
References
- Cittadini E, Goadsby PJ. Hemicrania continua: a clinical study of 39 patients with diagnostic implications. Brain. 2010;133(7):1973-1986.
- Peres MF, et al. Hemicrania continua is not that rare. Neurology. 2001;57(6):948-951.
- Headache Classification Committee of the International Headache Society. The International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition. Cephalalgia. 2018;38(1):1-211.
- Prakash S, Patel P. Hemicrania continua: clinical review, diagnosis, and management. J Pain Res. 2017;10:1493-1509.
- Matharu MS, et al. Central neuromodulation in chronic migraine patients with suboccipital stimulators: a PET study. Brain. 2004;127(1):220-230.