Author: Bolay, Hayrunnisa; Gül, Ahmet; Baykan, Betül
Title: COVIDâ€19 is a Real Headache! Cord-id: q7r2vfo1 Document date: 2020_5_27
ID: q7r2vfo1
Snippet: After the emergence of a novel coronavirus named SARSâ€CoVâ€2, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) was initially characterized by fever, sore throat, cough, and dyspnea, mainly manifestations of respiratory system. However, other manifestations such as headache, abdominal pain, diarrhea, loss of taste and smell were added to the clinical spectrum, during the course of the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. The reports on the neurological findings are increasing rapidly and headache seems to be the leader
Document: After the emergence of a novel coronavirus named SARSâ€CoVâ€2, coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) was initially characterized by fever, sore throat, cough, and dyspnea, mainly manifestations of respiratory system. However, other manifestations such as headache, abdominal pain, diarrhea, loss of taste and smell were added to the clinical spectrum, during the course of the COVIDâ€19 pandemic. The reports on the neurological findings are increasing rapidly and headache seems to be the leader on the symptom list. Headache was reported in 11%â€34% of the hospitalized COVIDâ€19 patients, but clinical features of these headaches were totally missing in available publications. According to our initial experience, significant features of headache presentation in the symptomatic COVIDâ€19 patients were newâ€onset, moderateâ€severe, bilateral headache with pulsating or pressing quality in the temporoparietal, forehead or periorbital region. The most striking features of the headache were sudden to gradual onset and poor response to common analgesics, or high relapse rate, that was limited to the active phase of the COVIDâ€19. Symptomatic COVIDâ€19 patients, around 6%â€10%, also reported headache as a presenting symptom. The possible pathophysiological mechanisms of headache include activation of peripheral trigeminal nerve endings by the SARSâ€CoVâ€2 directly or through the vasculopathy and/or increased circulating proâ€inflammatory cytokines and hypoxia. We concluded that as a common nonâ€respiratory symptom of COVIDâ€19, headache should not be overlooked, and its characteristics should be recorded with scrutiny.
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