2011 Volume 51 Issue 4 Pages 275-278
We report a Japanese patient with short lasting unilateral neuralgiform headache attacks with conjunctival injection and tearing (SUCNT) responsive to gabapentin. A 29-year-old man presented with sudden-onset intermittent left-sided orbital headache, which was not accompanied by lacrimation and conjunctival injection. We diagnosed trigeminal neuralgia at first and administered carbamazepine and loxoprofen. However, these medications were entirely ineffective at all and 6 days later, autonomic symptoms including conjunctival injection and tearing appeared. Diagnosis of SUNCT was made and gabapentin was started at up to 800mg per day. Soon after, the headache and autonomic symptoms disappeared. Gabapantin at 800mg per day was continued for 3 months and then reduced to 400mg per day. Soon he had only a slight headache without tearing and conjunctival injection. He has continued to take gabapenin at 400mg per day until now. This case indicated that headache and autonomic symptoms in SUNCT did not always emerge simultaneously, but they sometimes appear with time lag. Furthermore, the long-term clinical course and therapeutic outcome in SUNCT remain unknown. A therapeutic strategy and optimal dosage of medications including gabapentin should be established for the treatment of SUNCT.