A final word or two must be given to the distinction between neuralgia of the head and an affection so utterly different that it is surprising that they should be so frequently confounded. One constantly hears medical men speak of "sick headache" (migraine) as if it were the same thing as headache from indigestion; and, unfortunately, they often treat migraine upon this confused and erroneous notion, doing no little mischief thereby.
But, although migraine, already amply described, is entirely independent of the state of digestion, and its stomach-phenomena are purely secondary to the affection of the fifth nerve, there is a kind of headache really dependent on imperfect digestion. The sufferers from these headaches are dyspeptics whose stomach troubles are the result of chronic gastric catarrhal inflammation. (In the acute form of gastric catarrh there are even more severe headaches; but the general symptoms of the disorder are too marked to allow us to mistake the case for neuralgia complicated with secondary stomach disturbance.) The patients in question have frequently passed so gradually into the dyspeptic condition as to have become accustomed to it, and inclined to forget that the stomach was the organ which first gave them annoyance. The headaches, which occur from time to time, are either frontal or (more frequently) occipital in position, and they are usually quite evenly bilateral; still, there is not enough uniformity of difference between them and true migraine, in this respect, to enable us to establish a decided diagnosis upon it. This much may be said, however: that the pain is rarely or never seated in one parietal region, as is frequently the case with migraine and with clavus. The patient suffers very strikingly, in almost every case, from languor and a feeling of inability to exert himself; and has also much aching pain in the limbs, and usually a pain (sometimes very severe) in the scapular region. The tongue may vary a good deal in appearance, especially as regards the degree of general redness; but it always has enlarged papillæ, most prominent toward the tip, and more or less thick furring at the back, and reaching forward, in some cases, nearly to the tip, to which the "strawberry" aspect is then confined. The headache is frequently joined with nausea, but never with absolute vomiting, unless the stomach has been provoked with a meal that gives it more trouble than usual. The desponding frame of mind which this kind of dyspeptics always exhibit distinguishes them, in most cases, quite sufficiently (together with the unwholesome complexion, the appearance of the tongue, and the great complaints of general malaise and aching and feebleness of the limbs) from the victims of migraine, who are often persons of bright spirits and lively intelligence in the intervals of their attacks; but, above all, there is nothing of the regular and characteristic sequence of events which distinguishes the attacks of migraine. The attacks are not periodic, but nearly always depend on some chance dietary indiscretion, or other imprudence, which has visibly aggravated the stomach irritation. And, when the pain does come on, it has no uniform tendency to go on intensifying for some hours and culminate in vomiting, followed by sleep, after which the patient is free. On the contrary, the digestive disturbance is the provocation, and the pain itself is of a heavy character, with a sense of tension or fulness, and it does not go on intensifying in a regular manner, up to a climax, but hangs about in a dull, tormenting way, and frequently is just as bad after sleep as it was before. The diagnosis of these headaches from neuralgic headache is not really difficult; it only requires the use of a fair amount of caution in observation. It would, however, be exceedingly advantageous that the word "sick-headache" should be dropped altogether, and that migraine should always be called by that name (or "megrim," if you will), and that headaches really proceeding from chronic catarrhal disease of the stomach should be called "dyspeptic" headaches. The present state of nomenclature does much to perpetuate a confusion of ideas which ought not to exist any longer, and which leads to much practical mischief.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] See, on this subject, some remarks, in my work on "Stimulants and Narcotics" on Sir W. Hamilton's "Theory of the Relations of Perception and Common Sensation."
A very distinct and careful statement of the distinction between pain and hyperæsthesia will be found in a prize essay "On Neuralgia" by M. C. Vanlair, Jour. de Bruxelles, tom. xl., xli., 1865.
[2] "Senses and Intellect."
[3] "Gunshot Wounds and other Injuries to Nerves." Philadelphia: Lippincott & Co., 1864.
[4] Med. Times and Gazette, March 26, 1864.
[5] "London Hosp. Reports," 1866.
[6] "Stimulants and Narcotics," Macmillan, 1854, p. 86.