OSCELab
霍莉·哈里森
Initial Presentation 1 / 8

27-year-old woman with persistent headache and visual disturbance

Holly Harrison, a 27-year-old receptionist, presents with a two-month history of persistent headache and progressive visual blurring. She describes diffuse, throbbing headaches that are worse on waking and with straining, accompanied by nausea and brief episodes of visual obscuration when changing position.

130/80BP 72HR 16RR 37°CTemp

Holly presents with a two-month history of persistent headache and visual blurring. This combination immediately raises concern for raised intracranial pressure. The progressive nature over weeks to months is a red flag that distinguishes secondary headache from primary headache disorders. Your opening questions must establish the timeline, pattern, and associated features to determine urgency.

Establish duration and progression
Progressive symptoms over weeks suggest a secondary cause requiring urgent investigation
Identify red flag combinations
Headache plus visual symptoms is a high-risk presentation for raised ICP or space-occupying lesion
Assess impact on function
Persistent symptoms affecting work and daily life indicate significant pathology
Ask the AI to explain more
Detailed History 2 / 8

Detailed History

A systematic headache history must identify features of raised intracranial pressure: morning predominance, Valsalva aggravation (coughing, straining, bending), and postural visual symptoms. Transient visual obscurations—brief greying-out on position change—are pathognomonic of papilloedema. You must also screen for IIH risk factors (young woman, elevated BMI, certain medications) and exclude other secondary causes (trauma, infection, medication overuse).

Identify raised ICP features
Morning headache and Valsalva aggravation are cardinal signs of raised intracranial pressure
Characterise visual obscurations
Transient visual obscurations are specific for papilloedema and indicate optic nerve compromise
Screen for IIH risk factors
Young women with elevated BMI are the classic demographic; hormonal contraception and certain drugs increase risk
Exclude primary headache disorders
Absence of migraine features (photophobia, phonophobia, prior history) points toward secondary cause
Ask the AI to explain more
Focused Examination 3 / 8

Focused Examination

The examination must focus on detecting papilloedema (the hallmark sign of raised ICP) and excluding focal neurological deficits that would suggest a structural lesion. Fundoscopy is mandatory in any patient with headache and visual symptoms. Visual field testing by confrontation can detect enlarged blind spots. Cranial nerve examination should focus on CN II (visual acuity, fields, pupils) and CN VI (abducens palsy is a false-localising sign of raised ICP). A full neurological examination excludes focal deficits and meningism.

Perform fundoscopy
Bilateral papilloedema is the key diagnostic finding in IIH and indicates raised intracranial pressure
Test visual fields by confrontation
Enlarged blind spots are a direct consequence of papilloedema and can be detected at the bedside
Examine cranial nerves II-VI
CN VI palsy suggests significant raised ICP; intact cranial nerves reduce likelihood of posterior fossa lesion
Screen for focal neurological signs
Focal deficits would indicate a structural lesion requiring urgent imaging before LP
Ask the AI to explain more
Investigations 4 / 8

Investigations

Once papilloedema is identified, urgent neuroimaging (MRI preferred) is mandatory before lumbar puncture to exclude mass lesion, hydrocephalus, or venous sinus thrombosis—all of which can cause papilloedema but contraindicate LP. If imaging is normal, LP with opening pressure measurement and CSF analysis confirms the diagnosis: opening pressure >25 cm H₂O with normal CSF constituents meets modified Friedman criteria for IIH. Baseline bloods exclude metabolic and endocrine causes. Formal ophthalmology assessment with perimetry quantifies visual field loss for monitoring.

MRI brain before LP
Must exclude mass, hydrocephalus, and venous sinus thrombosis before LP to prevent herniation
LP with opening pressure
Opening pressure >25 cm H₂O with normal CSF confirms IIH by modified Friedman criteria
Baseline blood tests
Exclude anaemia, infection, metabolic and thyroid disorders that can cause headache
Formal visual field testing
Quantifies baseline visual field loss to monitor for progressive optic nerve damage
Ask the AI to explain more
Differential Diagnosis 5 / 8

Differential Diagnosis

The differential for headache with papilloedema includes any cause of raised intracranial pressure. Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) is the leading diagnosis in a young woman with elevated BMI, normal neuroimaging, and elevated LP opening pressure with normal CSF. Space-occupying lesions (tumour, abscess) are excluded by normal MRI. Cerebral venous sinus thrombosis is excluded by MR venography. CNS infection (meningitis, encephalitis) is excluded by normal CSF. Migraine and tension-type headache do not cause papilloedema. Medication overuse headache is a consideration given daily paracetamol use, but cannot explain objective papilloedema.

IIH is the leading diagnosis
Young woman, BMI 28, bilateral papilloedema, elevated LP opening pressure, normal MRI and CSF—meets diagnostic criteria
Exclude structural causes
Mass lesion, hydrocephalus, and venous thrombosis can all mimic IIH but require different management
Primary headache disorders do not cause papilloedema
Objective papilloedema distinguishes secondary from primary headache and mandates investigation
Consider medication overuse but prioritise IIH
Daily analgesia is relevant but papilloedema cannot be explained by medication overuse alone
Ask the AI to explain more
Diagnosis 6 / 8

Diagnosis

Holly meets the modified Friedman criteria for idiopathic intracranial hypertension: (1) papilloedema confirmed on fundoscopy, (2) normal neurological examination except for cranial nerve abnormalities, (3) normal brain MRI with no hydrocephalus or mass, (4) elevated LP opening pressure >25 cm H₂O (Holly's is 29 cm H₂O), and (5) normal CSF composition. IIH is a diagnosis of exclusion—secondary causes must be ruled out. The typical patient is a young woman of childbearing age with elevated BMI, which matches Holly's demographic. Untreated IIH can lead to permanent visual loss from optic nerve damage, making prompt diagnosis and management critical.

Apply modified Friedman criteria
These are the validated diagnostic criteria for IIH used internationally
IIH is a diagnosis of exclusion
Must rule out secondary causes (mass, thrombosis, infection) before confirming idiopathic disease
Recognise the risk of permanent visual loss
Papilloedema causes progressive optic nerve damage; urgent treatment protects vision
Ask the AI to explain more
Management Plan 7 / 8

Management Plan

IIH management has three goals: (1) prevent permanent visual loss, (2) relieve symptoms, and (3) address underlying risk factors. Weight reduction is the most effective long-term intervention—even 5-10% weight loss can reduce ICP and induce remission. Acetazolamide is first-line pharmacotherapy, reducing CSF production via carbonic anhydrase inhibition. Urgent ophthalmology referral is mandatory for serial visual field monitoring to detect progressive optic nerve damage. Neurology referral guides disease-modifying therapy and escalation (e.g. optic nerve sheath fenestration or VP shunt if medical therapy fails). Patient education about red-flag symptoms (sudden vision loss, severe headache) is essential.

Weight reduction is first-line
5-10% weight loss reduces ICP and can induce remission; most effective long-term intervention
Start acetazolamide
Reduces CSF production; first-line pharmacotherapy recommended by international guidelines
Urgent ophthalmology referral
Serial visual field testing detects progressive optic nerve damage requiring escalation
Neurology co-management
Guides medication titration and surgical escalation if medical therapy fails
Safety-net for red flags
Sudden vision loss or severe headache may indicate fulminant IIH requiring emergency intervention
Ask the AI to explain more
Recap 8 / 8

Case complete

Key learning points
  • IIH is a diagnosis of exclusion: normal MRI and normal CSF with elevated opening pressure (>25 cm H₂O) in the presence of papilloedema.
  • The classic patient is a young woman of childbearing age with elevated BMI; morning-predominant headache, Valsalva aggravation, and transient visual obscurations are hallmark symptoms.
  • Bilateral papilloedema on fundoscopy is the key examination finding and mandates urgent investigation to exclude secondary causes of raised ICP.
  • Weight reduction (even 5-10% loss) is the most effective long-term intervention and can induce remission; acetazolamide is first-line pharmacotherapy.
  • Urgent ophthalmology referral for serial visual field monitoring is mandatory to detect progressive optic nerve damage and prevent permanent visual loss.
Watch out for
  • Failing to perform fundoscopy in a patient with headache and visual symptoms—papilloedema is the key diagnostic sign and can be missed without direct visualisation.
  • Performing lumbar puncture before neuroimaging—always exclude mass lesion, hydrocephalus, and venous sinus thrombosis with MRI before LP to prevent herniation.
  • Dismissing the presentation as migraine or tension-type headache without examining for papilloedema—primary headache disorders do not cause objective optic disc swelling.
Do the full simulated case

AI-generated — may be incomplete or incorrect. For exam practice only, not medical advice.

We use essential cookies to run OSCELab and optional analytics to help us improve it. Privacy Policy