- 09 Jul, 2026
- Dr. Arun Rajeswaran
- No comment
Chronic Headache Causes: What Daily Headaches Mean, When to Worry, and When to See a Specialist
Chronic headaches are defined as headaches occurring on fifteen or more days per month for at least three months. Most are not caused by anything structurally dangerous migraine and tension-type headaches account for the large majority. But some chronic headache patterns indicate conditions that need investigation. Knowing the difference is what matters.
This page explains the most common causes of chronic headaches, the warning signs that change the picture, when an MRI is needed, and when a neurologist or neurosurgeon becomes the right specialist to see.
Main Causes of Chronic Headaches
Headache causes are divided into two broad categories: primary headaches, which are conditions in their own right with no underlying structural cause, and secondary headaches, which result from another medical condition.
Primary Headache Disorders
Type | Typical Pattern | Key Features | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
Chronic Migraine | One-sided, throbbing | Nausea, light/sound sensitivity; may have aura | 4–72 hours each attack |
Chronic Tension-Type | Band-like pressure both sides | Mild to moderate; no nausea or light sensitivity | 30 min to 7 days |
New Daily Persistent Headache | Daily from onset | Begins one specific day and never fully resolves | Continuous from onset |
Hemicrania Continua | One-sided, continuous | Responds completely to indomethacin; autonomic features | Continuous |
Cluster Headache (Chronic) | Around one eye | Excruciating; short duration; restlessness | 15–180 min per attack |
Secondary Headache Causes to Rule Out
- Raised intracranial pressure from tumour, hydrocephalus, or idiopathic intracranial hypertension
- Cervicogenic headache pain referred from the cervical spine, often felt at the base of the skull
- Medication overuse headache paradoxically worsening headache from frequent analgesic use
- Sinusitis less commonly the cause of true chronic daily headache than patients expect
- Sleep apnoea morning headaches from nocturnal oxygen desaturation
- Hypertensive headache severely elevated blood pressure causing headache
- Brain tumour uncommon but important to exclude in specific patterns
Brain Tumour Headache Pattern: What to Know
Brain tumours rarely cause headaches as their only symptom, particularly early in the disease. When a tumour does cause headache, the pattern tends to reflect raised intracranial pressure rather than the tumour location itself.
Features that raise concern for a secondary cause including tumour:
- Headache worse in the morning and improving as the day progresses
- Headache that wakes the patient from sleep
- Headache significantly worsened by coughing, straining, or bending forward Valsalva manoeuvre
- Progressive worsening over weeks without stabilisation
- Headache accompanied by neurological symptoms weakness, speech difficulty, vision change, personality change
- New headache pattern in a patient with a history of malignancy elsewhere
These features do not diagnose a tumour. They indicate that imaging is warranted to rule out a structural cause.
Thunderclap Headache: A Medical Emergency
A thunderclap headache is a sudden, severe headache reaching maximum intensity within sixty seconds. Patients often describe it as the worst headache of their life, coming on without warning.
This pattern must be treated as a neurological emergency until proven otherwise. The primary concern is subarachnoid haemorrhage bleeding around the brain from a ruptured aneurysm. This is a life-threatening event.
If you or someone near you experiences a sudden severe headache of this type, call for emergency help immediately. Do not wait to see if it passes.
When to Get an MRI for Headaches
Headache Feature | MRI Indicated? | Urgency | |
|---|---|---|---|
Thunderclap / worst headache of life | Yes CT first, then MRI if CT negative | Emergency | |
Morning headaches worsening over weeks | Yes | Urgent (within days) | |
Headache + neurological symptoms | Yes | Urgent | |
New headache in patient with cancer history | Yes | Urgent | |
Headache waking from sleep | Yes | Soon (within 1–2 weeks) | |
New headache over age 50 | Yes | Soon | |
Chronic stable migraine, no new features | Usually not required | As clinically guided | |
Tension headache, stable pattern, no red flags | Usually not required | As clinically guided |
Diagnosis and Tests
Clinical history is the most important diagnostic tool. The character, timing, location, duration, associated symptoms, and any triggers all help identify the headache type before any investigation is ordered.
When imaging is indicated, MRI of the brain with contrast is the investigation of choice. It identifies tumours, vascular abnormalities, hydrocephalus, and white matter changes. CT brain is used in the acute emergency setting when subarachnoid haemorrhage is suspected, given its rapid availability.
A lumbar puncture is performed when imaging is normal but subarachnoid haemorrhage remains suspected, as xanthochromia blood breakdown products in the CSF may be present even when the CT scan appears clear.
Blood tests, including inflammatory markers, thyroid function, and full blood count, may be requested to exclude systemic causes.
Treatment Options
Primary headache disorders are managed by a neurologist using a combination of acute treatments taken at the time of each attack and preventive medications taken daily to reduce frequency.
- Migraine: triptans for acute treatment; preventives include propranolol, topiramate, amitriptyline, or CGRP monoclonal antibodies
- Tension-type: NSAIDs and simple analgesics acutely; amitriptyline for prevention in chronic form
- Cluster headache: high-flow oxygen and sumatriptan injection acutely; verapamil for prevention
- Medication overuse headache: withdrawal of the overused medication with specialist guidance
For secondary headaches, treatment is directed at the underlying cause.
When to See a Neurosurgeon for Headaches
A neurosurgical referral is appropriate when imaging identifies a structural cause: a brain tumour, a cerebral aneurysm, hydrocephalus, or a vascular malformation. It is also indicated after a thunderclap headache where subarachnoid haemorrhage has been confirmed or a bleeding source is identified.
Most chronic headache patients are appropriately managed by a neurologist. The neurosurgeon becomes relevant when a structural lesion requiring surgical treatment is identified.
Conclusion
Chronic daily headaches are common and almost always treatable. The priority is identifying which patients have a secondary cause requiring investigation and which have a primary headache disorder requiring specialist headache management. The pattern of headache, not the severity alone, guides the clinical decision.
If you are experiencing persistent neurological symptoms, consult Dr. Arun for a detailed evaluation and personalised treatment plan.
Frequently Asked Questions
Most chronic headaches are not caused by serious underlying pathology. Primary headache disorders migraine and tension-type account for the vast majority. However, certain patterns warrant investigation: headaches progressive over weeks, worsening in the morning, associated with neurological symptoms, or arising newly in a patient over 50 or with a cancer history. These features should prompt imaging.
Occipital headache pain at the back of the head has several causes. Tension-type headache commonly produces this distribution. Cervicogenic headache, referred from cervical spine joints or muscles, frequently presents here. Occipital neuralgia causes sharp, shooting pain in the scalp from the occipital nerves. Raised intracranial pressure can cause diffuse headache with occipital predominance. A new occipital headache that is sudden or severe warrants assessment.
A thunderclap headache is a sudden severe headache reaching maximum intensity within sixty seconds. It must be treated as a medical emergency because subarachnoid haemorrhage bleeding around the brain from a ruptured aneurysm presents this way. Emergency evaluation with CT brain followed by lumbar puncture if CT is negative is the standard approach. Never dismiss a thunderclap headache as a migraine without imaging.
Investigation is indicated when headaches are new and progressive over weeks, when there are associated neurological symptoms, when morning worsening or nocturnal waking is present, when a sudden severe thunderclap onset occurs, when a patient has a malignancy history, or when headaches develop after age 50 without a prior headache history.
Yes, but it is uncommon for brain tumors to cause headache as the only symptom. Tumour-related headaches typically reflect raised intracranial pressure and are characterised by morning worsening, Valsalva aggravation, and progressive severity over weeks. They are usually accompanied by other symptoms: weakness, personality change, speech difficulty, visual disturbance, or seizures.
Chronic headaches are primarily managed by a neurologist, who specialises in diagnosing headache type and managing preventive and acute treatment. If imaging identifies a structural cause such as a brain tumour, aneurysm, or hydrocephalus, a neurosurgeon becomes involved. A GP is the appropriate first contact for new headaches before specialist referral.