Trigeminal Autonomic Cephalalgias 

Definition

Trigeminal autonomic cephalalgias (TACs) are a group of primary headache disorders characterized by:

  • Unilateral trigeminal distribution pain (V1 ± V2)
  • Prominent ipsilateral cranial autonomic features
  • Short-lasting, severe attacks (except hemicrania continua)


Core Pathophysiology

1. Trigeminal–Autonomic Reflex

  • Activation of trigeminal nociceptive pathways (V1)
  • Reflex activation of parasympathetic outflow via facial nerve (CN VII)
  • Through:
    • Superior salivatory nucleus
    • Sphenopalatine (pterygopalatine) ganglion

👉 Leads to:

  • Lacrimation
  • Conjunctival injection
  • Nasal congestion

2. Hypothalamic Dysfunction

  • Functional imaging activation of posterior hypothalamus
  • Explains:
    • Circadian periodicity (cluster headache)
    • Chronobiology of attacks

Classification (ICHD-3)

Disorder

Key Feature

Cluster headache

Most common TAC

Paroxysmal hemicrania

Absolute indomethacin response

SUNCT / SUNA

Ultra-short attacks

Hemicrania continua

Continuous unilateral headache


 1. Cluster Headache

 Key Features

  • Severe, unilateral orbital/supraorbital pain
  • Duration: 15–180 min
  • Frequency: 1 every other day 8/day

 Autonomic Features (ipsilateral)

  • Lacrimation
  • Conjunctival injection
  • Nasal congestion
  • Ptosis/miosis (partial Horner’s)

 Behavioral Feature

  • Restlessness/agitation (pacing) exam differentiator from migraine

 Periodicity

  • Occurs in clusters (weeks–months)
  • Strong circadian pattern

 Treatment 

Acute

  • 100% oxygen (12–15 L/min NRBM)
  • Subcutaneous sumatriptan (first-line)

Preventive

  • Verapamil (1st-line)
  • Lithium (chronic cluster)
  • CGRP monoclonals (e.g., galcanezumab)


 2. Paroxysmal Hemicrania

  • Severe unilateral pain (similar to cluster)
  • Duration: 2–30 min
  • Frequency: >5/day (often 10–40/day)

 Diagnostic Hallmark👉 Complete response to indomethacin

 Treatment

  • Indomethacin = diagnostic + therapeutic
  • Alternatives (rare): topiramate, celecoxib


 3. SUNCT / SUNA

 Definitions

  • SUNCT = Short-lasting Unilateral Neuralgiform headache with Conjunctival injection and Tearing
  • SUNA = Same but autonomic features may vary

 Features

  • Duration: 1–600 seconds
  • Frequency: up to 100s/day
  • Pain: stabbing, electric (trigeminal neuralgia-like)

 Key Differentiator

  • Prominent autonomic features (vs trigeminal neuralgia)

 Treatment

  • Lamotrigine (1st-line)
  • Others:
    • Topiramate
    • Carbamazepine (less effective)


4. Hemicrania Continua

 Key Features

  • Continuous unilateral headache
  • Superimposed exacerbations
  • Autonomic features during exacerbations

 Diagnostic Hallmark👉 Absolute response to indomethacin


 Investigations 

  • Diagnosis is clinical (ICHD-3)
  • MRI brain indicated if:
    • Atypical features
    • Neurological deficit
    • Suspicion of secondary TAC

Secondary causes:

  • Pituitary tumors
  • Posterior fossa lesions

 Comparison Table 

Feature

Cluster

Paroxysmal Hemicrania

SUNCT/SUNA

Hemicrania Continua

Duration

15–180 min

2–30 min

1–600 sec

Continuous

Frequency

1–8/day

>5/day

Up to 100s/day

Continuous

Severity

Very severe

Very severe

Severe

Moderate–severe

Autonomic

+++

+++

+++

+ (during flare)

Restlessness

Present

Sometimes

No

No

Indomethacin

No

Yes

No

Yes

Sex

M>F

F>M

Equal

Equal


Differentials to Know

Condition

Key Difference

Migraine

Longer duration, prefers rest

Trigeminal neuralgia

No autonomic features

Sinusitis

Less severe, not paroxysmal

Temporal arteritis

Older age, ESR

 Exam Pearls

  • Cluster headache = restless patient + circadian periodicity
  • Indomethacin-responsive headaches = PH + hemicrania continua
  • SUNCT = seconds + conjunctival injection + tearing
  • Always unilateral + autonomic features = think TACs
  • Oxygen is first-line acute therapy in cluster headache
  • Posterior hypothalamus = key structure