Chronic Headaches: Types and Treatment

Most people have had a headache. Stress, dehydration, too much screen time, not enough sleep – these everyday headaches are uncomfortable, but they’re usually short-lived and respond well to rest and over-the-counter pain relievers. Chronic headache disorders are a different animal entirely.
During Migraine and Headache Awareness Month this June, it’s worth talking about the difference between an occasional headache and a headache disorder that starts interfering with daily life. Chronic headaches are not simply “bad headaches.” They are recurring neurological conditions that can affect work, sleep, concentration, mood, and overall quality of life.
Types of Chronic Headache Disorders
Migraines
A migraine is not just a bad headache. It’s a neurological event, and it affects an estimated 37 million Americans. Because many cases go unreported or misdiagnosed, the real number is likely higher.
Migraines are a disorder involving the brain and nervous system. During a migraine attack, changes in nerve signaling and brain activity can trigger inflammation, altered pain processing, and heightened sensory sensitivity throughout the nervous system. Many sufferers experience throbbing or pulsing pain, often on one side of the head, along with nausea, dizziness, blurred vision, sensitivity to light and sound, fatigue, facial pressure, or visual disturbances called auras. Attacks can last anywhere from a few hours to several days.
Migraine severity can range from mild to debilitating. They can also present with symptoms that are mistaken for other, more routine conditions. For example, 90% of self-diagnosed sinus headaches are actually migraines, according to the American Migraine Foundation. (True sinus headaches, called rhinosinusitis, are actually rare.) That’s because migraines irritate the same facial nerves involved in sinus sensations, leading to congestion, watery eyes, facial pressure, and ear discomfort. If you’ve been treating recurring headaches with decongestants without real relief, a misdiagnosis might be why.
Migraine triggers vary from person to person, but common triggers include hormone changes, poor sleep, stress, dehydration, bright sunlight, heat, certain foods, and even weather changes. Gulf Coast summers can be especially rough for people prone to migraines because heat and dehydration are such common triggers.
Treatment often goes beyond basic pain relievers. Many patients benefit from prescription migraine medications like triptans, CGRP inhibitors, anti-nausea medications, or preventive therapies designed to reduce attack frequency.
Cluster Headaches
Cluster headaches are less common than migraines, but they are often described as one of the most painful headache disorders a person can experience. The pain is usually centered around one eye and is commonly described as burning, stabbing, or piercing. Cluster headaches may also cause tearing, redness in the eye, nasal congestion, facial sweating, or drooping on one side of the face.
Unlike migraines, which can last for hours or even days, cluster headaches tend to come in short, intense bursts that happen in cycles, or “clusters.” A person may experience multiple attacks per day for weeks or months at a time, often around the exact same time each day or night. Because of this pattern, some people refer to them as “alarm clock headaches.”
The clockwork timing points researchers to the hypothalamus, a small brain structure that regulates the body’s biological clock, hormones, and sleep cycles. It’s believed that a periodic disruption there triggers the attacks, though exactly how and why isn’t fully understood. Disrupted sleep and seasonal changes are common triggers.
One detail that makes cluster headaches especially unique is how people behave during an attack. Migraine sufferers often want to lie still in a dark, quiet room. People experiencing cluster headaches are usually restless instead, pacing, rocking, or moving around because the pain feels impossible to sit through comfortably.
Cluster headaches are also treated differently than migraines. One of the most effective treatments for acute attacks is high-flow oxygen therapy, which can help shorten symptoms for some patients when used quickly after an attack begins. Prescription medications may also help prevent or reduce cluster cycles over time.
Chronic Tension-Type Headaches
When people picture an everyday headache, they are usually thinking of a tension-type headache. These headaches tend to cause a dull, steady pressure or tightness around the forehead, temples, scalp, or back of the neck. Unlike migraines or cluster headaches, tension headaches usually do not cause severe nausea, visual aura, or extreme sensitivity to light and sound.
Tension headaches affect up to 80% of adults at some point, and most people experience them occasionally and move on. But when they occur 15 or more days per month for at least three months, they cross into chronic territory. Chronic tension headaches can happen frequently enough to interfere with concentration, productivity, sleep, and overall quality of life.
Stress, poor posture, jaw clenching, eye strain, lack of sleep, muscle tension, dehydration, and long hours at a desk or screen can all contribute to chronic tension-type headaches.
Treatment for chronic tension-type headaches often involves identifying underlying triggers and reducing strain on the body. For mild to moderate attacks, over-the-counter pain relievers work well when used sparingly. For chronic cases, a doctor may recommend low-dose antidepressants, antiseizure medications, or therapies like biofeedback to reduce frequency over time.
When to Seek Medical Attention
Recurring headaches should not simply be brushed off as “normal,” especially if they are becoming more frequent, more severe, or interfering with daily life.
You should seek medical evaluation if headaches:
- Suddenly become severe or unusual
- Cause confusion, weakness, or vision changes
- Wake you from sleep
- Happen frequently throughout the month
At Urgent Care of Fairhope, our team can help evaluate headache symptoms, rule out more serious concerns, and help guide you toward appropriate treatment and follow-up care when needed. Check our waitlist online and visit us six days per week for expert care close to home.
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