Today’s headache assessments focus mainly on diagnosing and ruling out serious conditions. While this works well for diagnosis, it can sometimes limit a fuller clinical evaluation.
Many patients fulfilling migraine criteria also demonstrate cervical symptoms or examination findings that correlate with their headache experience.
The real challenge is not diagnosing but understanding what the findings mean.
Examination as Contributor Identification
A physical examination isn’t necessarily to label migraine as musculoskeletal problem. Instead, they can help spot factors that might be changed and that affect a sensitive trigeminocervical system.
Clinical questions shift from:
- What is the diagnosis?
- What influences this patient’s presentation?
- identify reproducible symptom modulation
- guide multimodal management
- explain inter-individual variability
- improve patient engagement through validation.