Why pain appears in the temples and eyes: common causes and treatment of the symptom

When headaches and eye pain occur simultaneously, a person cannot always independently determine the cause and does not know which doctor to contact. Such a complex symptom can really cause difficulties, since it can occur both due to eye diseases and neuralgic disorders .

In any case, unpleasant sensations in the temples and eyes require examination by specialists, especially if they regularly make themselves felt.

Symptoms of pain in the eyes and temples

It is worth noting! Depending on the cause of the development of pain in the eyes and temples, this phenomenon may be accompanied by the following additional symptoms:

  • a feeling of heaviness in the head generally or only in the temples;
  • insomnia;
  • constant fatigue, weakness, tiredness and apathy;
  • dizziness;
  • changes in blood pressure.

The symptom itself can have a different character and be pulsating, pressing or acute.

Headache and venous congestion

Venous stagnation (or disturbances of venous outflow from the cranial cavity) is a syndrome that often occurs with headaches of various types. Unfortunately, it is a common situation when venous outflow disorders are not taken into account in the treatment of tension headaches and migraines; as a result, patients suffer for years.

Even though venous outflow disorders are often described during head studies (MRI, vascular ultrasound), they are practically not taken into account in combination with other signs and complaints of the patient.

Manifestations of venous stagnation

Venous pressure inside the cranial cavity normally changes constantly - it increases with straining, coughing, sneezing, and decreases with rest. If venous outflow becomes difficult, characteristic complaints may appear:

  • Heaviness in the head and pain in the morning.
  • Swelling of the face (especially the eyelids) after sleep.
  • Bursting headache.

Disturbances of venous outflow and nature of pain

Disturbances in venous outflow can change the nature of pain in patients with tension-type headaches. For example, pressing pain in the temples is accompanied by heaviness in the head after sleep.

There are even situations when disturbances in venous outflow are the main and only cause of headaches, and tension headaches come later.

The situation is no easier for migraine patients. In addition to the migraine itself, many also experience tension in the neck muscles and impaired venous outflow. In such patients, headaches almost never stop.

In practice, it turns out that an incorrect diagnosis (without taking into account venous outflow disorders) leads to long-term and ineffective treatment of headaches.

Difficulties in diagnosis

How can a doctor suspect the presence of a “venous factor”? After all, as we see, complaints with venous stagnation are not so specific. Only on the basis of symptoms such as swelling of the face and heaviness in the head in the morning, a correct diagnosis cannot be made.

The patient should be asked about changes in pain patterns and headache frequency. Since the tone of the veins can change with changes in atmospheric pressure, weather or cycle phase in women, all this must be taken into account.

Venous congestion can be confirmed using the following methods:

– Consultation with an ophthalmologist - dilated veins will be visible in the fundus. – Ultrasound examination of blood vessels - a decrease in the speed of blood flow through the veins will be noted. – Magnetic resonance imaging in phlebographic mode - dilated venous sinuses and veins will be noticeable.

However, the conclusion “impaired venous outflow” in itself does not carry much value - what is more important is the full clinical picture with the specifics of your complaints.

How to treat?

With regard to drugs for disrupting venous outflow from the cranial cavity, the situation is complex. There are currently no effective drugs with proven action against veins inside the skull. In practice, vascular drugs (for example, Cavinton) and metabolic drugs (Mexidol) are often prescribed, which may cause some improvement (although their effect has not been proven). Sometimes venotonics (for example, Detralex) are prescribed with a positive effect

Among other methods of treating headaches with impaired venous outflow, the methods of manual therapy, massage, and physiotherapy (if there is tension in the neck muscles or the effect of osteochondrosis on the blood vessels) have proven themselves to work well in practice.

Timely detection of venous outflow disorders and consultation with a neurologist can protect against progression and chronicity of pain.

Be healthy!

Maria Meshcherina

Photo istockphoto.com

Causes

Such signs always refer to the head, and they only radiate to the eyes, although in case of infectious lesions (this is one of the causes of the symptom), pain in the eyes and temples has the same origin.
The following are the main reasons for this violation:

  1. Migraine . Pathology of a neurological nature, the origin of which cannot always be determined. A distinctive feature of the symptom is spontaneous attacks, sometimes occurring for no apparent reason. The pain is throbbing and can spread from the temples to one or both halves of the head. Treatment is prescribed after diagnosis and is carried out according to an individual scheme.
  2. Problems with intracranial or blood pressure . Aches in the eyes and temples are always accompanied by fatigue and apathy.
  3. Trigeminal neuralgia . It occurs as a result of inflammatory or infectious diseases and has a sharp pulsating character. In complex cases and with developing complications, treatment is prescribed in a hospital setting. The disorder cannot be treated with symptomatic medications: the underlying disease must be eliminated.
  4. Osteochondrosis. With this disease, the blood supply to the brain is disrupted, since the problem affects the cervical spine, reducing circulatory activity. Unpleasant sensations begin in the back of the head and over time radiate to the temples and move to the eye area.
  5. Glaucoma. The only disorder in which the main affected area is the eyes, and the aches spread to the temples from them. Since this disease can be accompanied by clouding of consciousness, nausea and weakness. In the first stages, in the absence of visual disturbances, it is confused with poisoning, which is also accompanied by pain in the eyes and head.
  6. Sarcoidosis. This pathology affects the lungs, but can affect many other body systems, including the organs of vision. Additional signs in addition to pain are redness of the eyes. Spasms occur from the nervous system, which leads to aching in the head.
  7. Temporal arteritis. Damage to the temporal arteries, most often occurring in old age due to structural changes in the vessels. In such cases, the pain is concentrated in the temporal region and may not always radiate to the eyes.
  8. Malignant or benign tumors in the eye orbit or in the brain . In the first case, everything is clear - destructive processes also cause painful sensations. If we talk about benign formations, they may not always manifest themselves in the form of pain, and the nature of the unpleasant sensations depends on their type. So, with neuromas, the pain is concentrated in the eye area, and with hemangiomas, the patient feels pain in the temples.
  9. Cluster violations . They most often do not have their own causes and are of a burning, sharp nature, which is sometimes difficult to associate with any external or internal factors. The main location is the temporal region on the left or right side. The pain goes only to the eye located on the same side.
  10. Pregnancy. During this period, aches in the temples are associated either with hormonal changes or (in later stages) with weight gain, which is not typical for slender women in their normal state and requires the expenditure of a large amount of the body's resources, hence the load on the circulatory system and blood supply disorders.

Important! Such pain can also occur in weather-dependent people when the weather changes, but specialists are not able to fully treat this condition and are ready to offer such patients only painkillers.

Pain in the temple area

Pain in the temple area is one of the most common complaints with which patients turn to a neurologist. Modern research shows that more than 70% of the population of developed countries complain of episodic or chronic headaches in the temple area. However, this figure does not reflect the true state of affairs, since many patients do not go to doctors, self-medicating or not wanting to be examined. This leads to the development of dangerous side effects, namely:

  • liver damage;
  • kidney damage;
  • allergies;
  • gastrointestinal disorders.

Causes of pain in the temple area

Headaches in the temple area may be associated with impaired tone of the cerebral vessels of the arterial and venous beds. These may be symptoms:

  • Autonomic dysfunction;
  • migraine;
  • increased intracranial pressure.

In older age, these are the initial manifestations of arterial hypertension and cerebral atherosclerosis. Provoking moments can be a change in weather, mental, emotional and physical overload. In this case, heaviness in the head and pressing, throbbing pain in the back of the head or temples are characteristic. The causes of pain in the temple area can be:

  • Infectious diseases (various, including influenza, sore throat and many others);
  • intoxication (that is, poisoning), the most familiar of which is alcohol;

Psychogenic headaches are “nervous” headaches, aching, dull, sensations that arise either in the temple, then in the back of the head, or somewhere inside. This increases irritability and fatigue. Patients complain of general “discomfort in the head,” which makes it difficult to gather thoughts and concentrate, plus a feeling of anxiety. Migraine and cluster pain are independent diseases, the main symptom of which is a severe acute headache covering one half of the head. At the same time, shiny dots (“spots”) appear before the eyes. Some people experience increased sensitivity to smells, tastes, and various external stimuli during an attack. Subsequently, patients complain of pain in one half of the head, pain in the temple, radiating to the eye.

If untreated, the pain spreads throughout the head, and nausea and vomiting often occur. Migraine headaches may be accompanied by photophobia and general weakness. Suffering lasts from 30 minutes to several hours. If the attack drags on for several days, it may end in a migraine stroke; In women, migraine is usually associated with the menstrual cycle and first makes itself felt during puberty, a period of hormonal storms. During pregnancy, the frequency of attacks decreases; after childbirth, migraines may go away forever. The causes of pain in the temples can be caused by the following reasons:

  • Hormonal disorders during menopause;
  • headaches in the temple area of ​​unknown etiology;
  • temporal arteritis.

It is worth noting that temporal arteritis is a rare disease in which inflammation of the walls of the temporal arteries occurs, causing excruciating severe throbbing pain in the temple area.

Pain in the temple area often indicates disruption of the cranial and spinal nerves. One of the most common symptoms of temporomandibular joint pathology . Typically, headaches due to pathology of the temporomandibular joint are located in the temple area, the back of the head, and even the shoulders (shoulder blades).

Jaw clenching and teeth grinding may be symptoms of temporomandibular joint disorder; these symptoms cause muscle pain , which may be the cause of headaches. A slipped TMJ disc can also cause pain in the joint, which often radiates to the temples, forehead, or neck. These headaches are often so severe that doctors mistake them and treat them as migraines or brain disorders.

Diet

Foods and drinks containing monosodium glutamate, which is a flavoring additive found in many processed foods; It is believed to be the cause of severe headaches. In addition, these foods in your daily diet can cause difficulty breathing and tension in the face and jaw. Pain occurs statistically in 10-15% of the population. Headache may appear 20-30 minutes after ingestion of glutamate . The pain is characterized by throbbing, dull and throbbing pain in the temple area and painful sensations in the forehead area. Products containing monosodium glutamate:

  • Chinese cuisine;
  • canned and dry soups;
  • roasted nuts;
  • processed meat;
  • turkey in its own juice;
  • gravies, sauces;
  • some types of potato snacks and chips;
  • spices and seasonings.

With a diet containing foods rich in nitrites , throbbing pain in the temple area may also occur. As a rule, half an hour after nitrites enter the body with the following food:

  • Canned ham
  • corned beef;
  • hot dogs;
  • salami;
  • bologna;
  • bacon;
  • smoked fish.

Chocolate is one of the most powerful migraine triggers. Eating chocolate can provoke the development of hypoglycemia. Chocolate also contains caffeine, which can trigger migraines , and phenylethylamine in chocolate causes vasoconstriction, which leads to headaches in the temple area.

Firstly, chocolate provokes hypoglycemia because it contains sugar, and also because cocoa beans have a mild hypoglycemic effect. Secondly, chocolate contains caffeine, a migraine trigger. Thirdly, it contains finylethylamine, which, being an amine, causes vasoconstriction and, as a result, a headache in the temple area. It is best to limit your consumption of these foods if you notice these symptoms after eating them. If pain in the temple area is regular, it makes sense to seek help from a professional neurologist.

Features of pain localization

Most often, pain in the temples and eyes spreads symmetrically to both halves , but sometimes the pain syndrome affects only the left or right side of the head and the organ of vision on the corresponding side.
Pain on the left may indicate an impending stroke , but mostly this happens after it.
In such people, pain in the left temple, radiating to the eye, may continue for the rest of their lives.

The side of localization may depend on the side of the trigeminal nerve lesion, as well as on the location of the tumors.

If the tumor is strongly displaced from the center to the left or right side, then it is on this side that the pain will be felt more clearly.

Preventive measures

When a tooth hurts and radiates to the temple, a doctor will help. In order to prevent such a situation, you need to follow simple rules.

  • Practice good oral hygiene. Brush chewing organs twice a day.
  • Choose the right brush and toothpaste, rinse your mouth after eating, and use floss.
  • Regularly visit the dentist for preventive examinations. Typically, they are recommended twice every 12 months. Come to the doctor even when nothing bothers you.
  • If pain occurs, you should immediately consult a doctor. There is no need to wait for complications to appear.

Such simple care gives excellent results, improves the quality of life, and prevents dangerous diseases. Regular sanitation is the key to dental health. If you have persistent migraines that do not go away with therapy, you need to see a dentist for a diagnosis.

Should I see a doctor?

Note! If such a symptom appeared for the first time, it was managed to stop with the help of an anesthetic and it does not appear again - there is no reason to worry.

But if pain attacks recur regularly and intensify, you need to visit a therapist.

He prescribes diagnostics , which usually includes urine and blood tests, MRI and CT, angiography of cerebral vessels, and then refers the patient to an ophthalmologist or neurologist (depending on what assumptions about the diagnosis arise).

What are the ways to relieve pain?

For pain in the temples and head, professional (often complex) treatment is required, which can be prescribed by a therapist or a highly specialized specialist .
But on the part of the patient himself, symptomatic therapy is allowed, and first of all, this is taking painkillers , from which you can choose the following:

  • aspirin;
  • ibuprofen;
  • paracetamol;
  • triptan;
  • spasmalgon.

If the patient is aware of problems with blood pressure or this is revealed during the examination, pressure stabilizers (enam, renitec, captopril) can be additionally used .

Need to know! Sometimes the necessary medications are not at hand - in such cases, the person himself is able to provide emergency assistance to himself, eliminating the pain or reducing its intensity.

If possible, apply a few drops of mint or eucalyptus essential oil or a warming agent (for example, finalgone) to the temples, rubbing such products with your fingers for several minutes.

At home, you can relieve pain by applying a cold compress made from a damp cloth to your forehead.

Additionally, you can drop a few drops of mint or rosemary oil or tea tree oil on it.

In the latter case, the compress should be additionally wrapped in cellophane, since tea tree extract can cause a chemical burn to the skin.

also drink black or green tea, adding a spoonful of honey , and also eat a handful of walnuts , adding a little honey and a piece of grated lemon with zest.

Stay up to date! The safest and most effective massage is that you can perform it yourself in several ways:

  1. Mentally drawing a line on your head from ear to ear, you need to determine its center. You need to press on this point for about two minutes with your index finger until pain appears in this place.
  2. After taking off your shoes and socks, you need to find your left and right feet and use your thumbs to alternately massage both feet for two minutes (during this time you need to make one hundred presses). This is a method of Chinese medicine, and despite the unobvious connection with headaches, this method helps many.
  3. Using the index fingers of both hands, you need to feel the small depressions on the outer corners of the eye (this is the area between the border of the orbital bone and the eyeball). To reduce pain, it is enough to perform several simultaneous presses on the left and right sides.
  4. There is a point above the nose, strictly in the middle between the eyes at the level of the eyebrows. You need to press on it with your index finger 20-30 times - and the pain will begin to subside.

Tooth and temple pain: causes and treatment

Toothache often does not visit us alone, but is accompanied by pain in the jaws, temples, eyes, head and neck. If you have a toothache or temple pain, then this is a reason to immediately consult a doctor.

Tooth and temple pain: the most common causes

Toothache comes in many forms and shades. Based on the sensations the patient experiences, we can draw preliminary conclusions about his disease.

  • If your teeth start to hurt from eating cold, hot, overly sweet or spicy food, from inhaling cold air, or from squeezing your jaw too hard, you most likely have hypersensitive tooth enamel or early stage caries.
  • If pain occurs periodically and is not associated with any external irritants, you most likely have pulpitis.
  • If the pain is constant, severe, throbbing, then we are talking about periodontitis.

If both the tooth and the temple hurt, we can conclude that the disease has already entered the pathological stage. This means that a visit to the dentist can no longer be put off, because we are talking not just about the health of your teeth, but also about preserving them in principle.

But toothache radiating to the temple is not always pathological.

A fairly common case is the eruption of the eighth molars, or, more simply, wisdom teeth. Few of us experience the growth of wisdom teeth easily and painlessly. When the eighth molar erupts, inflammation of the surrounding soft tissues often occurs, which can spread to the lymph nodes and muscles. In this case, only a dentist can alleviate your suffering.

Tooth and temple pain: how to reduce pain at home

As you understand, only a competent dentist can detect the source of the disease and cure it. All you have to do is try to reduce the pain while waiting for your appointment. At night, you can take an analgesic or antispasmodic tablet. It is best to put it on the sore tooth and chew it. If you are a supporter of traditional methods, try rinsing and bathing with a decoction of sage, chamomile, or soda or hydrogen peroxide. You can put a cotton swab soaked in clove oil on the sore tooth. Whatever you choose from the methods listed above, remember that only a doctor can eliminate the cause of acute pain radiating to the temple.

You can get a consultation at the DENTISTRY clinic. Make an appointment by calling +7 (8342) 308–088 or using the form below.

Make an appointment

Rating
( 1 rating, average 5 out of 5 )
Did you like the article? Share with friends:
For any suggestions regarding the site: [email protected]
Для любых предложений по сайту: [email protected]