NURS 6501: Week 7 Quiz Question 3 / NURS-6501N Advanced Pathophysiology
  NURS 6501: Week 7 Quiz:  Please contact Assignment Samurai for help with NURS 6501: Week 7 Quiz or any other assignment. Email: assignmentsamurai@gmail.com   Question 3 A 38-year-old male presents to the emergency department with excruciating, unilateral headaches occurring around the same time each day for the past two weeks. He describes the pain as a sharp, burning sensation behind his right eye, accompanied by tearing, nasal congestion, and redness of the eye. Based on these symptoms, what is the most likely pathophysiological mechanism underlying his cluster headaches? Group of answer choices
  • Reduced serotonin levels causing vasoconstriction of cerebral blood vessels
  • Excessive production of cerebrospinal fluid causing increased intracranial pressure
  • Dysregulation of the hypothalamus leading to cyclical activation of the trigeminal-autonomic reflex
  • Compression of the optic nerve due to an orbital mass
  Correct answer: Dysregulation of the hypothalamus leading to cyclical activation of the trigeminal-autonomic reflex   Explanation: The patient is describing classic symptoms of a cluster headache, which includes:
  • Severe, unilateral periorbital pain
  • Occurs in clusters (same time daily, often at night)
  • Associated autonomic symptoms:
    • Tearing (lacrimation)
    • Nasal congestion or rhinorrhea
    • Conjunctival injection (red eye)
    • Ptosis or miosis (sometimes)
  Pathophysiology:
  • Thought to involve the posterior hypothalamus, which regulates circadian rhythms.
  • Dysregulation leads to cyclical activation of the trigeminal-autonomic reflex, which causes:
    • Pain via trigeminal nerve activation
    • Autonomic symptoms via parasympathetic outflow
  Why the other choices are incorrect:
  • Reduced serotonin levels causing vasoconstriction → More related to migraine pathophysiology, not cluster headaches.
  • Excessive CSF production → Would cause increased intracranial pressure, typically with diffuse headaches, not cyclical and unilateral.
  • Compression of the optic nerve → Would result in visual deficits, not typical headache features with autonomic symptoms.