Accepted
at 10:29 a.m. Dec, 22, 2024
by
IantheBFG
Type of change:
Updated content
Rationale for change
It can't be considered Horner syndrome without the complete triad of ptosis, miosis, and anhidrosis. Amboss calls it "partial Horner sysndrome" because the face can still sweat.
Source: AMBOSS - https://next.amboss.com/us/article/YL0nwg
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Additional Resources


Localization and additional symptoms of primary headaches
These three types of primary headache can be differentiated according to pain localization, intensity, and additional symptoms.
– Tension headache: holocranial or bifrontal, dull headache; no autonomic symptoms
– Migraine: unilateral headache with autonomic symptoms (vomiting, nausea, phonophobia, photophobia)
– Cluster headache: unilateral, periorbital headache with conjunctival injection, lacrimation, rhinorrhea and swelling of nasal mucous membranes, Horner syndrome, forehead or facial sweating
– Tension headache: holocranial or bifrontal, dull headache; no autonomic symptoms
– Migraine: unilateral headache with autonomic symptoms (vomiting, nausea, phonophobia, photophobia)
– Cluster headache: unilateral, periorbital headache with conjunctival injection, lacrimation, rhinorrhea and swelling of nasal mucous membranes, Horner syndrome, forehead or facial sweating
One by one
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