Post-Traumatic Headache

Post-traumatic headache (PTH) is the most common symptom following traumatic brain injury (TBI), occurring in 30-90% of concussion patients. The ICHD-3 defines PTH as headache developing within 7 days of head injury. Most cases resolve within 3 months (acute PTH), but 20-30% persist beyond 3 months (persistent PTH). Persistent PTH often resembles migraine or tension-type headache in phenotype, and treatment is guided by the predominant headache phenotype rather than the traumatic etiology.

Bottom Line

  • Onset: Within 7 days of TBI (or within 7 days of regaining consciousness if applicable)
  • Acute PTH: Resolves within 3 months. Persistent PTH: Continues beyond 3 months (— the clinically challenging form).
  • Phenotype-based treatment: Most persistent PTH resembles migraine (~60%) or TTH (~30%). Treat according to the phenotype.
  • Paradox of severity: PTH severity does not correlate with TBI severity — mild TBI/concussion produces persistent headache more often than severe TBI
  • No PTH-specific treatments exist — management is borrowed from primary headache disorders based on attack characteristics
  • Address comorbidities: PTSD, anxiety, depression, insomnia, and cognitive dysfunction commonly coexist and worsen the headache prognosis

ICHD-3 Criteria

Type Criteria
Acute PTH attributed to moderate or severe TBI (5.2.1.1) A. Headache fulfilling C and D
B. Traumatic injury to the head has occurred
C. Headache develops within 7 days of injury (or within 7 days of regaining consciousness and/or ability to sense and report pain)
D. For acute: resolves within 3 months. For persistent: continues >3 months.
Persistent PTH attributed to mild TBI (5.2.2.2)

Phenotypes

Phenotype Frequency in Persistent PTH Features Treatment Approach
Migraine-like ~55-60% Pulsating, moderate-severe, photo/phonophobia, nausea, worsened by activity Treat as migraine: triptans for acute, standard migraine preventives
TTH-like ~25-30% Bilateral pressing, mild-moderate, no migrainous features Treat as TTH: NSAIDs for acute, amitriptyline for prevention
Cervicogenic ~10-15% Unilateral, radiating from neck, triggered by neck movement, associated neck trauma/whiplash Physical therapy, cervical nerve blocks, manual therapy
Occipital neuralgia ~5% Shooting/electric pain in occipital distribution, tenderness over occipital nerves GON block, gabapentin/pregabalin
Mixed Common Features of multiple phenotypes; headache character varies between attacks Address the predominant phenotype; combination approach

Acute Management (First 3 Months)

Early PTH Management

  • Relative rest (not strict bed rest): Current evidence supports a brief period of reduced activity (24-48 hours), followed by gradual return to activity as tolerated. Prolonged strict rest worsens outcomes.
  • Acute medications: NSAIDs (ibuprofen, naproxen) first-line. Triptans if migraine-like phenotype. Acetaminophen as alternative.
  • MOH prevention: Counsel from the outset to limit acute medication to <10-15 days/month. MOH developing on top of PTH is common and worsens prognosis.
  • Reassurance: Most PTH resolves within 3 months. Setting realistic expectations improves outcomes.
  • Sleep optimization: Sleep disruption post-concussion is very common and directly worsens headache. Address early.
  • Screen for comorbidities: Depression (PHQ-9), anxiety (GAD-7), PTSD (PCL-5), sleep (ISI). Treat concurrently.

Persistent PTH Management

Preventive Therapy

No RCTs have been conducted specifically for persistent PTH prevention. Treatment is extrapolated from primary headache evidence based on the phenotype.

Agent Best For Notes
Amitriptyline 25-75 mg Migraine-like or TTH-like PTH with insomnia Most commonly used preventive in PTH clinics. Dual benefit for headache + sleep. Level B evidence for migraine/TTH (extrapolated).
Topiramate 50-100 mg Migraine-like PTH Caution: cognitive side effects may compound post-concussive cognitive symptoms. Use at low doses. Monitor cognition.
Propranolol 60-160 mg Migraine-like PTH with comorbid anxiety or autonomic dysregulation Addresses migraine + tachycardia/anxiety sometimes seen post-concussion
Venlafaxine ER 150 mg Migraine-like PTH with comorbid depression/anxiety Treats headache + mood. Useful when psychiatric comorbidity is prominent.
OnabotulinumtoxinA Chronic migraine-like PTH (≥15 headache days/month) PREEMPT protocol. Used off-label for persistent PTH. Open-label data suggest benefit. No PTH-specific RCTs.
CGRP mAbs Migraine-like PTH refractory to oral preventives Post-hoc analyses of migraine trials included some PTH patients. Open-label PTH-specific studies are ongoing. Used in practice.
GON blocks Any PTH phenotype, especially occipital-predominant or cervicogenic Every 2-4 weeks. Low risk, can be combined with any medication.

Non-Pharmacologic Approaches

  • Graded aerobic exercise: The most important non-pharmacologic intervention. Sub-symptom threshold aerobic exercise (e.g., Buffalo Concussion Treadmill Test to determine threshold, then exercise below it) improves recovery and reduces headache frequency.
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy: Addresses pain catastrophizing, avoidance, and comorbid anxiety/PTSD. Effective for persistent PTH in observational studies.
  • Physical therapy: Cervical spine manual therapy, vestibular rehabilitation (if dizziness/imbalance), postural correction
  • Biofeedback: Effective for headache; also useful for autonomic dysregulation post-concussion
  • Sleep hygiene: Fundamental. Screen for and treat insomnia (CBT-I) and sleep apnea.

Prognostic Factors

Factor Association with Persistent PTH
Pre-existing migraine history Strongest predictor of persistent PTH
Female sex Higher risk of persistent PTH
Psychiatric comorbidity (anxiety, depression, PTSD) Strongly associated with chronification
Litigation / compensation Associated with delayed recovery (complex relationship; not purely malingering)
Early medication overuse Predicts chronification
TBI severity Paradoxically, mild TBI has higher persistent PTH rates than severe TBI

Red Flags in Post-Traumatic Headache

  • Progressive worsening weeks after injury — evaluate for expanding subdural hematoma, hydrocephalus, or CSF leak
  • New focal neurologic signs not present at initial evaluation
  • Seizures — post-traumatic epilepsy risk
  • Positional component developing after initial improvement — consider post-traumatic CSF leak
  • Fever, meningismus — if skull fracture or penetrating injury, evaluate for infection

References

  1. Ashina H, et al. Post-traumatic headache: epidemiology and pathophysiology. Nat Rev Neurol. 2019;15(10):607-617.
  2. Headache Classification Committee of the International Headache Society. The International Classification of Headache Disorders, 3rd edition. Cephalalgia. 2018;38(1):1-211.
  3. Larsen EL, et al. Acute and preventive pharmacological treatment of post-traumatic headache: a systematic review. J Headache Pain. 2019;20(1):98.
  4. Leddy JJ, et al. Early subthreshold aerobic exercise for sport-related concussion: a randomized clinical trial. JAMA Pediatr. 2019;173(4):319-325.
  5. Dwyer B. Posttraumatic headache. Semin Neurol. 2018;38(6):619-626.