Head and Neck Trauma as a Precursor for Occipital Neuralgia: Understanding the Temporal Relationship.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
BACKGROUND: While occipital neuralgia (ON) has been linked to head and neck trauma, the timing and development of symptoms following injury remain unclear This study investigates the onset of ON after trauma and injury mechanisms that may predispose individuals to ON. METHODS: 212 patients with ON were assessed for prior head/neck injury, timing of pain onset, and injury mechanism at Weill Cornell Medicine and Massachusetts General Hospital from 2020-2024. Postoperative outcomes were evaluated for patients who underwent nerve decompression surgery. RESULTS: A total of 117 patients (55.2%) reported a history of head/neck trauma. Among these, 65 patients (55.6%) reported pain onset following injury. Most patients (41.5%) reported pain starting on the same day, while others reported onset within one week (15.4%), within 6 months (13.8%), or longer (12.3%). Injury mechanisms included whiplash (64.6%), direct strike to head (46.2%), direct strike to head and neck (29.2%), direct neck strike (4.6%), and other (6.2%). Patients with a direct strike to the head and neck had significantly higher odds of experiencing pain following injury (p=0.01). Patients with trauma-related pain who underwent nerve decompression surgery (n=25, 38.5%) experienced significant reductions in pain intensity (8.5 points), frequency (17.9 days/month), and duration (20.4 hours) (p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: ON most commonly begins on the same day of injury, with whiplash and direct head/neck trauma being the most common mechanisms. Surgical decompression is an effective treatment for pain relief in ON patients with past head/neck trauma.