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Apex Nursing

Guide — Neurology

Migraine & Headache Nursing Care

Most headaches are benign primary headaches (migraine, tension, cluster). The nurse’s first duty is to rule out the dangerous secondary causes— then treat the pain with the right abortive and prevent the next attack.

8 min read · Neurology

Educational use only. Headache can signal serious underlying disease; medication selection is provider-directed. This is educational background for nursing care. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Overview

Primary headaches are disorders in themselves — migraine (throbbing, unilateral, with nausea and light/sound sensitivity), tension-type (bilateral, band-like, pressing), and cluster (severe, unilateral, around the eye, with tearing and nasal congestion, in clusters). Secondary headaches are symptoms of another problem — subarachnoid hemorrhage, meningitis, tumor, temporal arteritis — and can be life-threatening. Screening for red flags comes first.

Key Concepts

Red flags first (SNOOP)

Before calling a headache “just a migraine,” screen for danger: Systemic signs (fever, weight loss, immunosuppression), Neurologic deficits, Onset sudden (“thunderclap” = worst-headache-of-life → suspect SAH), Older age of new onset (> 50 → temporal arteritis), and Pattern change/Positional/Papilledema. Any red flag → urgent workup.

Migraine phases & aura

A migraine may move through prodrome → aura → headache → postdrome. Aura (visual scotomas/zigzags, sensory or speech changes) precedes some migraines — and migraine with aura affects estrogen-contraceptive safety (stroke risk).

Treatment: abort vs prevent

Abortive (taken at onset): NSAIDs, triptans (sumatriptan), antiemetics; ergots. Preventive (frequent attacks): beta-blockers, topiramate, amitriptyline, anti-CGRP agents. Cluster headache responds to high-flow oxygen and triptans. Overusing acute analgesics causes medication-overuse (rebound) headache.

Assessment Findings

Characterize the headache (OPQRST): location, quality (throbbing vs band vs stabbing), severity, timing, triggers, and associated features (nausea, photophobia, aura, tearing/congestion). Distinguish the patient’s usual headache from a new or different one. Screen for the SNOOP red flags and do a focused neuro exam. A sudden “worst headache of my life,” fever with neck stiffness, or new focal deficits demands emergent evaluation.

Nursing Priorities

Rule out the emergency

Screen for red flags and escalate any concerning headache (thunderclap, fever + stiff neck, focal deficits, new headache over 50) for urgent imaging/workup — don’t just medicate.

Relieve the attack

Give abortive therapy early, provide a dark, quiet environment, cool compress, and rest. For cluster headache, deliver high-flow oxygen. Treat nausea.

Teach trigger management & prevention

Help identify and avoid triggers (stress, irregular sleep/meals, certain foods, hormonal changes), encourage a headache diary, and reinforce preventive medication adherence and avoiding analgesic overuse.

Therapeutic Communication Considerations

Chronic headache is often dismissed, leaving patients frustrated and undertreated. Validate the disability migraines cause, take the pain seriously, and partner on a plan rather than implying it’s “just stress.” Explore the impact on work and life, and coach realistic trigger and lifestyle changes. Be alert that a patient minimizing a truly different headache may be downplaying an emergency.

Patient & Family Education

Teach taking abortive medication at the first sign of an attack, the limit on acute-medication days to avoid rebound headache, and adherence to preventives. Review trigger identification and a headache diary, sleep/meal regularity, and stress management. Stress that women with migraine WITH aura should avoid estrogen-containing contraceptives (stroke risk), and teach the warning signs (sudden severe headache, fever/stiff neck, weakness, vision/speech changes) that mean seek emergency care.

NCLEX Pearls

  • Rule out dangerous secondary headaches first (SNOOP): thunderclap = SAH, fever + stiff neck = meningitis, new onset >50 = temporal arteritis.
  • Primary types: migraine (throbbing, unilateral, photophobia/nausea), tension (band-like, bilateral), cluster (eye, tearing, in clusters).
  • Abortive = triptans/NSAIDs (take EARLY); preventive = beta-blockers, topiramate, amitriptyline, anti-CGRP.
  • Cluster headache responds to high-flow oxygen.
  • Migraine WITH aura + estrogen contraceptives = increased stroke risk — avoid.
  • Overusing acute analgesics causes medication-overuse (rebound) headache.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Heart Association / American Stroke Association (AHA/ASA) · American Association of Neuroscience Nurses (AANN). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →