3/27/2025 at 1:57:38 AM
Several years, ago I started getting cough headaches. The symptoms were just like it sounds: when I coughed, I got a headache, usually lasting for a few minutes. In addition, bending down caused a sharp pain in my head. Lying down was fine, indeed, all symptoms lessened or disappeared after a good night's sleep and got progressively worse as the day went on.My neurologist diagnosed it as a cough headache, but he cautioned that nobody knows the root cause.
He did say that it had to be physical/mechanical, in the sense that it had to be some fluid (or lack of fluid) that caused a problem depending on your orientation (bending down) or when shocked (coughing).
He suspected it had to do with spinal fluid and he ordered tests, but they all came back normal. He said that in most patients the symptoms go away after several years, and that's what happened with me.
But reading this article, I wonder if there is some connection here. The headaches started when my second child was born and I wasn't getting much sleep. Maybe, as the article theorizes, lack of sleep caused the fluid in my brain to not drain properly or not be cleaned or something. That could be why sleep decreased the symptoms. Maybe they should study cough headache sufferers and compare against normal people.
by GMoromisato
3/27/2025 at 1:29:36 PM
Since I was a child I have been very susceptible to exertion headaches and indeed coughing/sneezing can easily trigger this. They last from a couple of hours to the entire day, being gone when I wake up. The pain is not as bad if I lie down. I'm personally convinced it is directly linked to the pressure of my cerebrospinal fluid.MRI has of course revealed nothing. Syringomyelia was not supposed to be hereditary (father) and nothing has been detected, but there is a chance that the cavity is so small/narrow that it blocks shut when I lie down: pain subsides, nothing is there to be seen when I'm in the machine. Vertical MRI, anyone?
The "valsalva maneuver" has a 100% success rate of triggering symptoms, and recently (some years) I have begun to observe a high-pitched sucking sound, consistent duration of about a second, originating from somewhere between my right ear lobe and spine. The sound is not uncomfortably loud but could be missed if I was listening to music or having a conversation. I think I have only ever observed the sound when in a sitting position. When detected, the sound might be accompanied with a physical sensation, but it is so minimal that I'm unsure if I'm imagining it.
It's just one of those things at this point.
by v7n
3/30/2025 at 9:24:29 AM
I occasionally get headache that I think are related to pressure in the skull cavity. I also get light persistent headaches from exertion. In my case it's easy enough to avoid but I would like to limit such symptoms.by throwaway48476
3/27/2025 at 2:54:14 AM
My late wife had a brain tumor that put pressure on the sinus veins, causing increased cranial pressure that affected her eyesight.We learned through the process that many people have significant occlusions in those veins - some 100% on one side. It’s no problem for most people… and until recently there was little to do if there was a problem.
If you ever have a reason to get a contrast MRI of your brain, do it!
by Spooky23
3/27/2025 at 6:49:00 AM
How uncanny to find this thread right now, just a day after I had a bizarre case of sinus pain influencing my eyesight and dexterity somehow. Definitely something I should look into ASAP.Thank you Baader–Meinhof I suppose.
by krige
3/27/2025 at 10:44:53 PM
My terminology was poor. The venous sinuses aren’t associated with your sinus. They are sort of like the storm drain for your brain, in a sense, not the same as the nasal sinus.Sorry I can’t edit. Here’s some more info:
https://teachmeanatomy.info/neuroanatomy/vessels/dural-venou...
by Spooky23
3/27/2025 at 7:02:23 AM
I want to point out that bruxism at night can also cause similar symptoms via the same pathways.by evrimoztamur
3/27/2025 at 2:30:26 PM
I had to pay $3K cash to get an MRI of my knee one time, wonder how much for the brain, maybe the same?by ge96
3/27/2025 at 3:13:57 PM
You can get it done anywhere around the world in a private setting likely for 10% of the cost.https://ujbudamedicalcenter.hu/en/prices/
And if you go in the summer you can enjoy the warm night breeze of Budapest too!
by pas
3/27/2025 at 5:55:17 PM
An MRI of my lower back would have cost €160 in Europe had I been paying cash.Imagine having a free European vacation included with your MRI...
by ThePowerOfFuet
3/28/2025 at 1:44:27 AM
I suppose any Soviet block country should do it for around $50.by piskov
3/27/2025 at 7:14:13 AM
I also have those (along with sneezing). I cannot do anything for the next 5-10 minutes until it goes away. For me it's simply (but maybe not only, who knows when reading the sibling comments) allergies. I don't have allergy symptoms like cough or watery eyes, etc. But somehow my sinuses get "full" and pressure builds up inside. If I take antihistaminic almost daily then my sinuses (mostly one side) don't fill up and I can't cough or sneeze without fear. Since you went to a doctor they probably ruled that out, but maybe not, and it checks out with their "it's probably mechanical" hunch.by maaaaattttt
3/27/2025 at 4:59:46 AM
The cough headache appearing right after pregnancy is suspicious. Did you get an epidural? I think they are finding that CSF leaks (which can be a complication of lumbar punctures and epidurals) are underdiagnosed. I wonder whether a small leak might manifest as a headache triggered by coughing and bending over.by riskassessment
3/27/2025 at 7:11:02 AM
I’ve come across cough headaches with Chiari malformations.by lostlogin