Neurocritical Care | 2021

Pterygopalatine Fossa Blockade as Novel, Narcotic-Sparing Treatment for Headache in Patients with Spontaneous Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Background Severe headache is a hallmark clinical feature of spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH), affecting nearly 90% of patients during index hospitalization, regardless of the SAH severity or presence of a culprit aneurysm. Up to 1 in 4 survivors of SAH experience chronic headaches, which may be severe and last for years. Data guiding the optimal management of post-SAH headache are lacking. Opioids, often in escalating doses, remain the guideline-recommended mainstay of acute therapy, but pain relief remains suboptimal. Methods This study is a case series of adult patients who received bilateral pterygopalatine fossa (PPF) blockade for the management of refractory headaches after spontaneous SAH (aneurysmal and non-aneurysmal) at a single tertiary care center. We examined pain scores and analgesic requirements before and after block placement. Results Seven patients (median age 54\xa0years, 3 men, four aneurysmal and three non-aneurysmal) received a PPF-block between post-bleed day 6–11 during index hospitalization in the neurointensive care unit. The worst pain recorded in the 24-h period before the block was significantly higher than in the period 4\xa0h after the block (9.1 vs. 3.1; p \u2009=\u20090.0156), and in the period 8\xa0h after the block (9.1 vs. 2.8; p \u2009=\u20090.0313). The only complication was minor oozing from the needle insertion sites, which subsided completely with gauze pressure within 1\xa0min. Conclusions PPF blockade might constitute a promising opioid-sparing therapeutic strategy for the management of post-SAH headache that merits further prospective controlled randomized studies.

Volume None
Pages 1-8
DOI 10.1007/s12028-020-01157-1
Language English
Journal Neurocritical Care

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