A Patient With Headache And Seizures
Published 4/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 173.49 MB | Duration: 0h 38m
Published 4/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 173.49 MB | Duration: 0h 38m
Patient with Headache and seizures
What you'll learn
Headache, causes and Types
Seizures, Etiology and Types
Management of Headache
Management of Seizures
Requirements
No previous knowledge needed
Description
A course aimed at teaching about how to approach patients who present with headache and seizures together.What should be asked in the history. How should the patients be examined.Which investigations are useful.What are the differental diagnosis.How should the patient be managed.Seizures can happen for many reasons. It may be from high levels of salt or sugar in blood , brain injury from a stroke or head injury brain problems since birth.Other causes include Dementia, such as Alzheimer's disease, high fever or illnesses or infections that affect the brain.A seizure is a sudden, uncontrolled burst of electrical activity in the brain. It can cause changes in behavior, movements, feelings and levels of consciousness. Having two or more seizures at least 24 hours apart that don't have a known cause is considered to be epilepsy.A migraine is usually a moderate or severe headache felt as a throbbing pain on 1 side of the head. Many people also have symptoms such as feeling sick, being sick and increased sensitivity to light or sound. Migraine is a common health condition, affecting around 1 in every 5 women and around 1 in every 15 men.The exact cause of migraines is unknown, but they're thought to be the result of abnormal brain activity temporarily affecting nerve signals, chemicals and blood vessels in the brain.There are several types of migraine, including:Migraine with aura – where there are specific warning signs just before the migraine begins, such as seeing flashing lightsMigraine without aura – the most common type, where the migraine happens without the specific warning signsMigraine aura without headache, also known as silent migraine – where an aura or other migraine symptoms are experienced, but a headache does not develop
Overview
Section 1: Introduction to Seizures
Lecture 1 Introduction to Seizures
Section 2: Headache and its types
Lecture 2 Headache and its types
Section 3: Approach and History Taking in a patient with Headache and Seizures
Lecture 3 Approach and History Taking in a patient with Headache and Seizures
Section 4: History and Clinical Examination in a patient with Headache and Seizures
Lecture 4 History and Clinical Examination in a patient with Headache and Seizures
Section 5: Investigations to perform in patient with headache and seizures
Lecture 5 Investigations to perform in patient with headache and seizures
Section 6: Management of Patient presenting with Headache and Seizures
Lecture 6 Management of patient with Headache and Seizures
Allied Health Professionals