Headache and ocular
pain often coexist. Examination
of patients with eye disease will usually show visual disturbances, injection,
or pupil irregularities. Patients with a normal examination may have
ocular pain or symptoms caused by entities ranging from carotid dissection to
primary headache disorders, such as migraine. In this update, we focus on the
many causes and treatment of eye-related headache. We discuss the management of ocular emergencies,
including pituitary apoplexy, and unusual diseases such as Tolosa-Hunt, Behcet
disease, and optic neuritis related to West Nile virus
infection
and examine the causes and importance of photophobia in migraine.
Key points
- Eye pain is
more likely related to ocular disease, such as glaucoma, when the eye is
injected, edematous, or pupils are abnormal.
- Patients with
vision loss, ophthalmoparesis, or progressive symptoms usually require
urgent neuroimaging or referral.
- Pituitary
apoplexy is a neurologic emergency presenting with severe headache, vision
loss, ophthalmoparesis, or delirium.
- Ocular
symptoms such as visual aura, blurry vision, or photophobia are common in
patients with primary headache disorders such as migraine.
Overview
Because headache may
be accompanied by pain in the eye or visual symptoms, it is often attributed to
ocular disease. However,
if the sclerae are white and noninjected, ocular disease is rarely the cause of
headache. When eye disease is the cause of pain, the location and
character of the pain, associated symptoms, and ocular signs are usually
evident to the careful observer. Conjunctival injection, corneal edema, abnormal pupils, and decreased
vision are the hallmarks of such disorders. Clinicians other than
ophthalmologists should be familiar with the symptoms and signs of ocular
diseases, such as infection, inflammatory disorders, and glaucoma, that cause
headache.
Ocular symptoms are
commonly associated with both primary and secondary headache disorders (ie,
idiopathic intracranial hypertension). Patients with primary headaches, such as
migraine or cluster headache, may present with complaints of photophobia,
blurred vision, tearing, ptosis, or ocular pain.
Glaucoma. Misdiagnosis (eg, corneal erosion, dental problem,
cluster headache) is not uncommon. Acute closure glaucoma differs from headache
in the following ways: (1) acute closure glaucoma causes a mid-dilated pupil,
whereas cluster headache causes a mild Horner syndrome (a smaller pupil on the
side of pain) or no pupillary abnormality; (2) acute closure glaucoma causes a
cloudy (“steamy”) cornea with impaired light reflex and impaired vision,
whereas cluster headache causes no such abnormality; (3) acute closure glaucoma
causes marked elevation of intraocular pressure, and the globe feels hard; in
cluster headache the intraocular pressure is normal, and the eyeball feels
normal to palpation.
Subacute primary
angle-closure glaucoma may mimic a primary headache disorder. Patients report a
dull ache in or around a single eye with only mild blurring of vision. Symptoms
may occur when the patient watches television or movies in a dark room, reads,
or is fatigued. Intraocular pressure is normal (10 to 23 mmHg). Ophthalmologic
(slit-lamp) evaluation reveals a shallow anterior chamber, iris bombe (an
increase of fluid in the posterior chamber that causes a forward bulging of the
peripheral iris), and an enlarged pupil. A review of 9 patients with subacute
angle-closure glaucoma and headaches without ocular pain revealed that most
patients in this group had episodic headaches that were worse with physical
activity (Nesher 2005).
The chronic form of
primary angle-closure glaucoma may be asymptomatic or have symptoms of the subacute
form. An enlarged cup-to-disc ratio may suggest the diagnosis, but the pupils
and intraocular pressures may be normal.
The link between
glaucoma and migraine is uncertain. Although the majority of patients have
elevated intraocular pressures, about 25% of patients have normal pressures.
Many of these patients have migraine (Cursiefen 2000), and it may be that other
factors that may be important in migraine, such as vasospasm, autoimmune
diseases, or genetic factors, worsen nerve damage in glaucoma patients (Wax
2011).
Eye strain. Patients with headaches that are triggered or aggravated
by close visual work should have the benefit of proper correction, but
corrective measures are unlikely to have an effect on severe headaches.
Uncorrected hyperopic (farsighted) patients may have eye strain causing a mild,
bilateral, persistent brow ache that occurs when the patient must “strain” to
clear a blurred (or possibly diplopic) image, especially with near tasks
(Romano 1975). Such headaches are associated with extended and persistent close
visual tasks and do not occur instantaneously with a visual challenge (Vincent
et al 1989). Myopia (nearsightedness) or astigmatism is unlikely to cause
significant headache. In general, severe headaches cannot be attributed to eye
strain alone.
Eyelid disorders. The presence of a condition affecting the eyelids is
readily apparent to the patient and physician. The most common disorders
include the following:
- Hordeolum (stye)
- Chalazion
- Sebaceous carcinoma of the lid
- Blepharitis
- Dacryoadenitis
- Dacryocystitis
- Erysipelas of the face and other forms of cellulitis
Both a stye and a
chalazion usually present as a small, painful lump in the eyelid. A stye is an
infection of a lash follicle, and chalazia stem from chronic inflammation of
oil-producing meibomian glands.
Blepharitis is an
inflammatory reaction of the eyelid margin. It usually occurs as seborrheic
(nonulcerative) or staphylococcal (ulcerative) blepharitis. Both types may
coexist. Symptoms of staphylococcus aureus blepharitis include itching,
lacrimation, burning, and photophobia. Symptoms are usually worse in the
morning. Ulcerations at the base of eyelashes and broken, sparse, or
misdirected eyelashes (trichiasis) may also be present.
Dacryoadenitis is an
infection and inflammation of the lacrimal gland and is characterized by
swelling, pain, tenderness, and redness over the upper temporal aspect of the
upper eyelid. Acute dacryoadenitis must be differentiated from viral infection
(mumps), sarcoidosis, Sjogren syndrome, tumors, leukemia, and lymphoma.
Acute dacryocystitis
causes pain, redness, and edema about the lacrimal sac. Additional symptoms
include epiphora (an overflow of tears on the cheek, due to imperfect drainage
by the tear-conducting passages), conjunctivitis, blepharitis, fever, and
leukocytosis. Recurrent acute inflammations may result in a red, brawny,
indurated area over the sac.
Cellulitis around the
eyes is a potentially dangerous periorbital and orbital infection. Symptoms of
periorbital cellulitis include lid edema, rhinorrhea, orbital pain, tenderness,
headache, conjunctival hyperemia, chemosis (edema of the bulbar conjunctiva),
ptosis, limitation to ocular motion, increased intraocular pressure, congestion
of retinal veins, chorioretinal stria, and gangrene and sloughing of the lids.
Disorders of the
conjunctiva and cornea. Conjunctivitis per se
does not cause severe pain but may cause orbital discomfort. Allergic
conjunctivitis is commonly associated with intense itching, whereas infectious
(viral, bacterial, chlamydial) and irritant conjunctivitis usually does not
cause significant pruritus.
Dry eye, or aqueous
tear insufficiency, is a common cause of eye pain. Symptoms include stinging,
burning, or a foreign body sensation. Multiple medications, such as anticholinergic
drugs or sympathomimetics, can worsen symptoms. Treatment consists of
artificial tears or topical corticosteroids or cyclosporine.
In the United States, keratitis due to herpes simplex
virus infection is the second most important corneal disease (after corneal
trauma) leading to loss of vision. Herpes simplex type 1 is the type most
closely associated with eye infection. In primary herpes infection, clusters of
vesicles on the face, eyelids, and mucous membranes precede the conjunctivitis,
which is follicular, occasionally membranous, and self-limited, lasting 2 to 3
weeks. Preauricular lymphadenopathy is present. Patients may require corneal
transplantation and continued antiviral prophylactic treatment (Goldblum 2008).
Both acyclovir and valacyclovir are effective (Miserocchi 2007). The hallmark
of herpetic epithelial keratitis is the superficial dendritic or geographic
ulcer (best demonstrated with fluorescein) associated with a decrease in
corneal sensitivity. Herpetic stromal keratitis is a cell-mediated immune
response to noninfectious herpes virus antigen. Patients with stromal keratitis
have disciform stromal edema with corneal thickening, opacification, and striae
in the Descemet membrane (posterior limiting membrane of cornea). Disciform
keratitis may be caused by trauma, herpes varicella zoster, vaccinia, mumps,
and chemical injury. Herpetic eye disease is more common and often severe in
immunosuppressed patients and diabetics. In 1 cohort study, poor glycemic
control was shown to correlate with increased acyclovir consumption (Kaiserman
2005). Rarely, this can lead to complete ophthalmoplegia (Delengocky and Bui
2008).
Cogan syndrome may present with hearing loss or ocular or
systemic symptoms. The most common ocular disease is nonsyphilitic interstitial
keratitis, which is bilateral in 80% of cases. Patients may present with
ophthalmologic signs or symptoms alone, and headache is the most common
systemic symptom (Gluth 2006).
Disorders of the iris,
sclera, and globe. Hyphema is hemorrhage
within the anterior chamber of the eye and is characterized by sudden decrease
in visual acuity. If the intraocular pressure is elevated, there may be pain in
the eye, with or without headache. The whole anterior chamber may be filled
with blood, or a blood level may be seen. The conjunctiva is hyperemic with
perilimbal injection.
IInflammation of the
uveal tract (iris, ciliary body, and choroid) is called uveitis. Uveitis takes
3 forms: (1) anterior uveitis refers to ocular inflammation limited to the iris
alone (iritis) or the iris and ciliary body (iridocyclitis); (2) intermediate
uveitis refers to inflammation of the structures just posterior to the lens
(pars planitis or peripheral uveitis); (3) posterior uveitis refers to
inflammation of the choroid (choroiditis), retina (retinitis), or vitreous near
the optic nerve and macula. When the affected eye is covered, the patient with
iridocyclitis will experience pain in the affected eye when a bright light is
shined into the normal eye (consensual photophobia). Intermediate and posterior
uveitis can cause minimal pain unless associated with an iritis. Major features
of anterior uveitis include decreased visual acuity that is generally acute in
onset, deep eye pain, consensual photophobia, conjunctival vessel dilation,
perilimbal (circumcorneal) dilation of episcleral and scleral vessels (ciliary
flush), and small pupillary size of the affected eye. Anterior uveitis is
usually unilateral (95% of HLA-B27-associated cases). Bilateral involvement and
systemic symptoms (fever, fatigue, and abdominal pain) may be associated with
interstitial nephritis. Systemic disease is most likely to be associated with
anterior uveitis. The most common etiologies are infection and immune-mediated
(especially rheumatologic) disease, but about 25% of cases are idiopathic.
Anterior uveitis may be misdiagnosed as conjunctivitis, episcleritis,
scleritis, keratitis, and acute angle-closure glaucoma. Close inspection of the
conjunctiva, cornea, iris, pupil, and intraocular tension can minimize
misdiagnosis. Ophthalmologic evaluation of the anterior chamber should be
performed as soon as possible.
Multiple autoimmune
disorders can cause uveitis. Systemic diseases with extra-organ involvement are
seen in over one-third of cases followed by infectious diseases. Non-infectious
systemic diseases, such as Behcet disease, multiple sclerosis, and sarcoidosis,
are uncommon but not rare. Strictly anterior uveitis is most common, occurring
in about 60% of cases. Systemic diseases are responsible for over one-third.
Ocular toxoplasmosis is especially important in isolated posterior uveitis
(Barisani-Asenbauer et al 2012).
Behcet disease often presents with uveitis and causes
visual loss, and it is one of the most common causes of uveitis in adults (Kazokoglu et al
2008). A recent survey demonstrated a prevalence of 80% of recurrent headache
in patients with Behcet disease, with most patients experiencing moderate to
severe disability (Kidd 2006).
Scleritis is an
inflammation of the scleral outer coat of the eye. Usual symptoms include
redness and inflammation of the sclera and pain ranging from mild discomfort to
extreme localized tenderness. However, posterior scleritis is an exception to
the rule that a “white” eye without visual symptoms is not the cause of pain.
Posterior scleritis can present with monosymptomatic eye pain that requires
ultrasound for diagnosis (Daroff 1995). The eye should be exquisitely tender,
however.
Inflammation of the
episclera, or episcleritis, is a benign and frequently recurrent disorder that
primarily affects young adults. Edema and congestion of the episclera are often
sectoral but may be diffuse or nodular. Ocular pain, redness, photophobia,
tenderness, tearing, and mild uveitis (15% of patients) are common. The cause is
usually unknown, but hypersensitivity reactions may play a role. Episcleritis
may be associated with rheumatoid arthritis, collagen vascular diseases, herpes
zoster, gout, coccidiomycosis, tuberculosis, and syphilis.
Endophthalmitis is an
acute microbial infection confined within the globe. Infection involving the
sclera as well as other intraocular structures is called panophthalmitis.
Infections of the globe can be exogenous or endogenous. Exogenous infection
results from a penetrating injury or it may follow intraocular surgery or a
ruptured corneal ulcer. Endogenous infection by the hematogenous route is less
common and may be accompanied by fever and chills. The patient complains of
pain, blurred vision, and photophobia. Examination discloses redness of the
eye, chemosis of the conjunctiva, swelling of the eyelid, hypopyon (pus in the
anterior chamber), and cloudy media (fundus hazily seen or absent red reflex).
Infectious and
inflammatory eye diseases. The differential
diagnosis of eye pain and headache also includes many infectious and
inflammatory causes.
Idiopathic inflammatory orbital pseudotumor refers to a
noninfectious, inflammatory, space-occupying lesion of the orbit that simulates
a neoplasm. Signs and symptoms develop acutely and consist of orbital pain, lid
swelling, conjunctival chemosis and injection, proptosis, iritis, optic disc
edema, and extraocular muscle disturbances. Proptosis and pain are the
predominant features. Approximately one-half of patients eventually develop
bilateral orbital involvement. Half of all patients develop systemic
manifestations, including headache, fever, vomiting, pharyngitis, anorexia,
abdominal pain, and lethargy. Trauma, infection, foreign body, and malignancy
must be excluded by examination and laboratory testing.
Orbital cellulitis, orbital abscess, and subperiosteal
abscess
may cause lid swelling, erythema, proptosis, and ophthalmoplegia. Vision is
often impaired with orbital abscess and subperiosteal abscess.
Mucormycosis (zygomycosis or phycomycosis) is a fungal
infection that is typically seen in immunocompromised or debilitated patients.
Predisposing conditions include diabetic ketoacidosis, chronic renal failure,
and treatment with steroids or cytotoxic drugs. The diagnosis should be
considered in diabetic patients with black, necrotic lesions (eschars) of the
nose or sinuses or with new cranial nerve abnormalities. Without treatment,
cerebral invasion may ensue. Bacterial cavernous sinus thrombosis may result
from spread from the contiguous sphenoidal or ethmoidal air sinuses, either
directly or via the emissary veins. Exophthalmos, papilledema, severe cerebral
symptoms (headache, decreased level of consciousness, convulsions), cranial
nerve palsies, and high fever are present. The prognosis is grave; the
mortality rate remains about 30%, despite antibiotic therapy.
Dysthyroid ophthalmopathy is probably the leading cause of
unilateral exophthalmos and is the leading cause of bilateral exophthalmos in
adults. Ocular ache is more common than severe eye pain. Inflammatory cells and
a mucilaginous ground substance infiltrate the extraocular muscles and other
orbital contents. This is followed by fibrosis of orbital tissues. Patients
often have diplopia caused by restriction of the extraocular muscles, most commonly
the inferior rectus. Forced ductions, wherein the examiner attempts to manually
rotate the eye, show that the passive movement of the eye is limited by the
involved muscle. Other findings include proptosis, vascular congestion over the
insertion of the lateral or medial rectus muscle on the globe, lid retraction
or lid lag, and edema of the eyelids. Dysthyroid ophthalmopathy can occur in a
patient who is hyperthyroid, but it can also occur in patients who have been
treated for hyperthyroidism and are euthyroid or even hypothyroid. It may even
occur in patients who have not yet developed other evidence of thyroid disease.
Therefore, it is a clinical diagnosis based on the eye findings rather than on
laboratory evidence of thyroid dysfunction.
Orbital hematoma is most often due to zygomatic fracture.
Diplopia may be present as a result of orbital hematoma. Facial paresthesias or
hypesthesias of the upper lip and cheek occur if the infraorbital nerve is
damaged at the infraorbital foramen or more posteriorly in the orbital floor,
where the infraorbital canal constitutes an area of weakness.
Pituitary apoplexy. Pituitary apoplexy occurs almost exclusively in patients
with pituitary tumors and is due to hemorrhagic infarction of the tumor or the
pituitary gland itself. Chronic hemorrhage into the pituitary gland or gradual
infarction of it may occur without symptoms. Sudden hemorrhage or infarction is
a medical emergency. Neurologic symptoms are most prominent, and transient
neurologic symptoms frequently precede the acute event over several days. The
usual symptoms and signs include the following: increasing headache, diplopia,
blurred vision, visual loss, and visual field defects (especially bitemporal
hemianopia); extraocular motor palsies are common; altered mental status with
lethargy, confusion, and delirium that may progress to coma; nausea and
vomiting; less commonly, paresthesias, ataxia, seizures, and focal hemispheric
symptoms; symptoms of the preexisting pituitary adenoma, eg, previous headache,
visual defects, and hypopituitarism; meningeal irritation may be prominent;
fever is common and may result from subarachnoid bleeding, acute
hypoadrenalism, or hypothalamic compression; hypotension is present in those
with acute adrenal insufficiency; and respiratory failure may occur because of
hypothalamic compression or increased intracranial pressure. Early treatment
with surgical decompression can improve visual outcomes (Muthukumar 2008).
Carotid artery
dissection. Spontaneous carotid artery dissection sometimes mimics
migraine headache and is in the differential diagnosis of sudden-onset
“thunderclap” headaches. Carotid artery dissection may also be associated with
visual symptoms that resemble migrainous visual aura. Most patients with
carotid artery dissection present with unilateral headache and facial or neck
pain, followed by focal cerebral ischemic symptoms, retinal ischemia, or
oculosympathetic palsy. However, pain as the only symptom of cervical artery
dissection is rare and only sporadically reported. In a series of 44 patients
with cervical artery dissection, only 2 presented with pain alone (Sturzenegger
1995). Headache or neck
pain typically is ipsilateral to the side of dissection. In patients with an
internal carotid artery dissection, pain is limited to the anterior head in 60%.
Pain is limited to the anterior head in 60% of patients with an internal
carotid artery dissection. A recent meta-analysis did not show differences
between anticoagulation or antiplatelet treatment for stroke prevention after
dissection (Kennedy et al 2012).
Parasellar syndromes. The parasellar
syndrome consists of dysfunction of the third, fourth, and sixth cranial nerves. Involvement of the
ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve may be added. Primary neoplasms
sometimes occur in this region, but metastatic lesions are more common. Other
processes that produce the parasellar syndrome include cavernous sinus
thrombosis, carotid-cavernous sinus fistula, and aneurysm of the intracavernous
carotid artery. If a specific cause cannot be found, the diagnosis of
Tolosa-Hunt syndrome may be considered. A dramatic response to steroids is
characteristic of, but not diagnostic for, Tolosa-Hunt syndrome. Diagnosis
requires thorough investigation before empiric corticosteroid therapy.
Granulomatous inflammatory diseases such as seen with rheumatoid arthritis,
Wegener granulomatosis, sarcoidosis, lupus, and eosinophilic granulomas should
be considered (Johnston 2002). A prompt response to steroids has been observed
repeatedly in neoplasms, and exacerbations and remissions are not uncommon with
aneurysms, neoplasms, or infectious granulomas.
Orbital causes of painful ophthalmoplegia include the
orbital diseases mentioned above (eg, orbital cellulitis, abscess) and
neoplasms at the orbital apex (primary, contiguous, or metastatic). Nonorbital
causes of painful ophthalmoplegia include intracranial, cranial, pericranial,
and metastatic neoplasms. Common primary intracranial neoplasms causing painful
ophthalmoplegia would include pituitary adenoma, meningioma, and
craniopharyngioma. Cranial tumors include chondroma, multiple myeloma, and
lymphoma. Nasopharyngeal carcinoma is a relatively common cause, and biopsy
should be obtained if another cause cannot be easily identified. Intracranial
hypertension can cause a sixth nerve palsy as a false localizing sign.
Eye pain and vision
loss. Giant cell, or temporal, arteritis should be considered
in any individual over the age of 50 who has unexplained headache of recent
onset.
Elevation of the Westergren erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive
protein level has a strong correlation with positive temporal artery biopsy.
However, biopsy-proven giant cell arteritis can occur with either normal
sedimentation rate or normal C-reactive protein levels (Parikh 2006). Jaw
claudication and polymyalgia rheumatica may heighten the suspicion, but their
absence does not exclude the diagnosis. If giant cell arteritis is likely,
presenting with markedly elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate and typical symptoms,
steroids should be started and the patient should have a long segment temporal
artery biopsy.
Eye pain and vision loss are commonly seen with processes
affecting the optic nerve. The most common cause of acute optic neuropathy in
young patients is demyelinating disease, such as multiple sclerosis or
neuromyelitis optica. The pain of optic neuritis is believed to be caused by traction
of the inflamed optic nerve sheath at the orbital apex (Lepore 1991). Eye pain
and pain on eye movement precede visual symptoms in about 40% of patients with
demyelinating optic neuritis (Optic Neuritis Study Group 1991).
Ocular pain is less
common in anterior ischemic optic neuropathy. Other causes of optic neuritis
include infections, such as measles, mumps, or syphilis, and inflammatory
disorders, including systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjogren syndrome, or
sarcoidosis. West Nile virus infection has also been described as a
cause of bilateral optic neuritis and chorioretinitis (Anninger 2003).
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor
cerebri) may present with headache, diplopia, pulsatile tinnitus, visual field
loss, and visual obscurations. Most patients have papilledema, but some patients may
present without papilledema despite similar clinical symptoms (Digre et al
2009).
Primary headache
disorders and ocular pain. Eye pain and periorbital pain may be symptoms of primary
headache disorders. Migraine, the trigeminal autonomic cephalgias (eg, cluster,
paroxysmal hemicrania, hemicrania continua, sudden unilateral neuralgiform pain
with conjunctival infection and tearing [or SUNCT syndrome], and idiopathic
stabbing headache) may all have eye pain as a major symptom. The pain is episodic
or nonprogressive and usually associated with other symptoms. Without obvious ocular
pathology, the eye itself is rarely responsible for the pain and discomfort
(Behrens 1978). Pain with eye movement is an uncommon symptom of migraine;
however, significant bilateral pain with eye movement could be a symptom of
meningeal irritation or idiopathic intracranial hypertension. Orbital
cellulitis, orbital myositis (eg, trichinosis), orbital periostitis, and optic
neuritis can also cause pain with eye movement, but additional signs and
symptoms should suggest the diagnosis.
Primary headaches may
be associated with oculosympathetic paresis, conjunctival injection, and lid
edema, but not with proptosis, limitation of ocular motion, erythema, an
eschar, fever, congestion of retinal veins, consensual photophobia, halos
around lights, an enlarged cup-to-disc ratio, or cloudy media.
Many migraine patients will endorse the symptom of
“double vision” off a checklist. The examiner must determine whether the
patient is referring to “blurred vision” (the vast majority of cases) or true
diplopia, with separation of images with binocular vision and resolution of
diplopia with 1 eye covered. Momentary diplopia is sometimes related to a
heterophoria brought on by medication, fatigue, and distress.
Photophobia commonly accompanies, but is not specific
for, migraine. Photophobia is of 2 types: (1) peripheral and (2) central.
“Peripheral” photophobia occurs with inflammation of the anterior segment of
the eye. Pupillary constriction pulls or displaces the pain-sensitive iris and
ciliary muscles; immobilization of the iris and ciliary muscles with
cycloplegic eye drops reduces the photophobia despite increasing the amount of
light to the retina. “Central” photophobia occurs in any condition associated
with pain in the distribution of the ophthalmic nerve (ie, any headache). In
general, photophobia is more prevalent with severe migraine (Daroff 1995).
Unilateral photophobia is more common in patients with trigeminal autonomic
cephalgias than in patients with migraine (Goadsby 2010).
Photosensitive retinal
ganglion cells containing melanopsin, a photopigment, allow regulation of
circadian rhythms via the suprachiasmatic nucleus and are an important part of
the photophobia pathway. Noseda and colleagues studied blind individuals with
migraine and found that blind persons with intact sleep patterns and pupillary
light reflex had worsening pain intensity in migraine with light exposure
(Noseda et al 2010). Blind persons with migraine with no light perception, such
as those with severe optic nerve damage or bilateral enucleation, are not
photophobic. This suggests these melanopsin-containing cells, and not rods or cones, are important in
photophobia. Anterograde tracing demonstrates that these retinal images
project to the posterior thalamus, which then project widely to multiple
cortical regions. These cortical projections may explain other common migraine
symptoms that can worsen with photophobia such as weakness, incoordination, or
visual disturbances (Gooley 2003).
Ophthalmoplegic migraine is a rare condition (Daroff 1995)
that almost always begins in childhood with repeated episodes of headaches that
usually last several days and gradually resolve, whereas a third (rarely fourth
or sixth) nerve palsy slowly evolves, leaving the patient with a painless
unilateral third nerve palsy that recovers over the course of weeks (Daroff 2001). Lance
and Zagami propose that ophthalmoplegic migraine is a recurrent demyelinating
or inflammatory cranial neuropathy (Lance and Zagami 2001). The cause and
mechanism for ophthalmoplegic migraine remain elusive. Case reports suggest an
inflammatory etiology with MRI evidence of cranial nerve enhancement and
elevated IgG index in the CSF of the affected patient (van der Dussen 2004).
The most recent International Classification of Headache Disorders characterize
this as a rare entity with “recurrent attacks of headache with migrainous
characteristics associated with paresis of 1 or more ocular cranial nerves
(commonly the third nerve) in the absence of any demonstrable intracranial
lesion other than MRI changes within the affected nerve.”
Monocular visual loss
may be seen with retinal migraine. For the diagnosis of retinal migraine to be
secure, the patient should have experienced multiple stereotyped episodes of
monocular visual loss associated with migraine headaches. However, the vast
majority of reported cases of retinal migraine do not conform to this pattern
(Daroff 1995). Binocular visual disturbances are a hallmark of migraine with
aura. Diplopia can be seen as an isolated neurologic symptom with
ophthalmoplegic migraine or associated with other brainstem symptoms in basilar
migraine.
Conjunctival injection, periorbital edema, ptosis, or
lacrimation can be seen with cluster headache, the autonomic hemicranias, and
SUNCT syndrome. Cluster headache typically presents with severe episodes of
pain that last 15 to 180 minutes and often localize to the eye. The pain may be
described as burning, stabbing, or as if “the eye is being pushed out.” Up to
25% of patients develop a permanent Horner syndrome (Brazis 2002). The
pain of hemicrania continua is usually unilateral with constant pain with a
variable degree of autonomic symptoms ipsilateral to the side of pain. Hemicrania continua is a
syndrome that responds dramatically to treatment with indomethacin
(Klein 2006). SUNCT syndrome often causes ocular pain lasting from 5 to 250 seconds, usually with conjunctival injection and
tearing, with attacks occurring up to 200 times per day. Trigeminal neuralgia
is a distinctive lancinating, unilateral pain in the distribution of the
trigeminal nerve. This can involve the ophthalmic division and cause eye pain,
but is more commonly seen in the maxillary or mandibular divisions of the
nerve.
Differential
diagnosis
Eyelid disorders
- Vision: normal
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: edema may mimic
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: normal
Dacryoadenitis
- Vision: normal
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: normal
- Other: localized swelling, pain, and tenderness
Periorbital cellulitis
- Vision: may have irritated eye movement
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: edema may mimic
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: may be elevated
- Other: untreated can cause septic cavernous
thrombosis
Conjunctivitis
- Vision: normal
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: mild
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: normal
Hyphema
- Vision: abrupt decrease in vision
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: can be elevated
Anterior uveitis -
iritis
- Vision: decreased
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: miosis, irregular
- Photophobia: present
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: normal
- Other: mydriatics relieve symptoms
Anterior uveitis -
iridocyclitis
- Vision: decreased
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: miosis
- Photophobia: consensual photophobia
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: normal
Posterior uveitis
- Vision: decreased
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: absent
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: absent
- Intraocular pressure: normal
Corneal disorders
- Vision: decreased
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: absent
- Photophobia: present
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: normal
Acute angle-closure
glaucoma
- Vision: decreased
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: fixed mid-dilated, oval
- Photophobia: present
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: high
- Other: mydriatic = disaster
Subacute angle-closure
glaucoma
- Vision: absent or mild blurring
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: enlarged
- Photophobia: present during episode
- Local signs of inflammation: usually absent
- Intraocular pressure: usually normal
- Other: elevated cup-to-disc ratio
Chronic angle-closure
glaucoma
- Vision: usually normal
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: absent
- Intraocular pressure: usually normal
- Other: elevated disc-to-cup ratio
Scleritis
- Vision: normal
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: present
- Local signs of inflammation: usually present, globe
tender
- Intraocular pressure: normal
- Other: posterior scleritis may cause eye pain with
"white" eye
Episcleritis
- Vision: normal
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: present
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: normal
- Other: minimal pain; often idiopathic, whereas
scleritis is often associated with immune-related diseases
Endophthalmitis
- Vision: blurred
- Proptosis: normal
- Ptosis: normal
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: present
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: normal
Orbital disease
- Vision: may be decreased; diplopia
- Proptosis: present
- Ptosis: may be present
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: may be elevated
- Other: systemic symptoms and fever common
Cavernous sinus
thrombosis
- Vision: may be decreased; diplopia
- Proptosis: present
- Ptosis: may be present
- Pupils: oculomotor or Horner syndrome may be present
- Photophobia: minimal
- Local signs of inflammation: present
- Intraocular pressure: may be elevated
Dysthyroid
ophthalmopathy
- Vision: usually normal; diplopia
- Proptosis: present; may be unilateral or bilateral
- Ptosis: uncommon
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: may be present
- Intraocular pressure: may be elevated
- Other: thyroid studies may be normal
Parasellar syndrome
- Vision: diplopia due to third, fourth, or sixth nerve
palsy
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: may be present
- Pupils: third nerve mydriasis
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: absent
- Intraocular pressure: normal
Pituitary apoplexy
- Vision: blurred vision and diplopia often present
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: may be present
- Pupils: third nerve mydriasis
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: absent
- Intraocular pressure: normal
- Other: cerebral symptoms and cranial neuropathy
common
Optic neuritis
- Vision: present, but eye pain may precede visual loss
in 40% of patients
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: relative afferent pupillary defect
- Photophobia: present
- Local signs of inflammation: absent
- Intraocular pressure: normal
Referred pain (eg,
sinusitis)
- Vision: normal
- Proptosis: absent
- Ptosis: absent
- Pupils: normal
- Photophobia: absent
- Local signs of inflammation: pericranial inflammation
- Intraocular pressure: normal
- Other: purulent discharge; postural exacerbation