Differentials by Age Group
Select an age band to view common diagnoses, secondary causes, and clinical pearls
• Sumatriptan 6 mg subcutaneous (SC) — most effective acute agent; acts within 10–15 minutes. Can be self-administered. Limit to 2 injections per 24 hours.
• 100% high-flow Oxygen at 12–15 L/min for 15–20 minutes via non-rebreathe mask — effective in ~70% of attacks. Crucially, in NHS, home oxygen supply for Cluster Headache requires a specialist-initiated Home Oxygen Order Form (HOOF). This pathway cannot be initiated in primary care alone — Neurology referral is required to access this treatment.
• Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) brain with contrast — to exclude low Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF) pressure headache (spontaneous intracranial hypotension), Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis (CVST), and inflammatory or structural causes
• Lumbar puncture with opening pressure measurement — to identify occult raised or low Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF) pressure
• Specialist preventative trials: intravenous (IV) methylprednisolone, mexiletine, low-dose naltrexone, and nerve blocks have limited but reported benefit in this condition
• Realistic prognosis-setting: New Daily Persistent Headache (NDPH) may remit spontaneously (most likely in the first 2 years) but this is unpredictable; managing patient expectations is part of specialist care
• Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) brain with dedicated trigeminal nerve sequence — to exclude:
— Demyelination: Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is found in ~4% of Trigeminal Neuralgia (TN) cases; more likely in patients under 50, women, and those with bilateral or atypical distribution
— Vascular compression of the trigeminal nerve root entry zone — identifies candidacy for Microvascular Decompression (MVD), a highly effective neurosurgical procedure with 70–80% long-term pain-free rates
— Posterior fossa tumour, arteriovenous malformation, or other structural cause
• Expert guidance on drug titration, monitoring, and tolerability
• Assessment for procedural interventions: Gamma Knife Stereotactic Radiosurgery (GKRS), percutaneous balloon microcompression, or glycerol rhizotomy for those not suitable for, or failing, Microvascular Decompression (MVD) NICE CG156 Trigeminal Neuralgia (2013) · European Academy of Neurology (EAN) / European Federation of Neurological Societies (EFNS) Trigeminal Neuralgia (TN) Guidelines 2019 · BASH Guidelines 2023
Tension-Type Headache (TTH)
NICE CG150 (2012, amended 2025) · British Association for the Study of Headache (BASH) Guidelines 2023
| Drug | Dose | Max Daily | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ibuprofen | 400 mg | 3 doses | Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug (NSAID). Take with food. Avoid if gastrointestinal (GI) or renal risk. Best evidence base for Tension-Type Headache (TTH) among simple analgesics. |
| Aspirin | 600–900 mg | 4 doses | Avoid in patients under 16. Soluble formulation preferred for faster absorption. |
| Paracetamol | 1 g (1000 mg) | 4 doses | Safest profile. Less effective than Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs) for Tension-Type Headache (TTH). First choice in pregnancy or when NSAIDs contraindicated. |
| Drug | Starting Dose | Target Range | Evidence & Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amitriptyline | 10 mg nocte | 10–75 mg nocte | Best evidence for Chronic Tension-Type Headache (CTTH) prophylaxis — Number Needed to Treat (NNT) ~3.6 at 75 mg. Titrate by 10–25 mg every 2–4 weeks. Common effects: sedation, dry mouth, constipation. Obtain Electrocardiogram (ECG) if dose >40 mg or cardiac risk factors. Follow NICE NG46 guidance on safe prescribing and withdrawal of antidepressants. |
| Drug | Dose | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mirtazapine | 15–30 mg nocte | Noradrenergic and Specific Serotonergic Antidepressant (NaSSA). Useful if amitriptyline not tolerated. Weight gain is common. Off-label use for headache. |
| Venlafaxine | 37.5–150 mg daily | Serotonin-Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitor (SNRI). Off-label. Evidence base exists. Discontinuation syndrome — always taper. Blood pressure (BP) monitoring at higher doses. |
Acupuncture is NICE-recommended when pharmacological prophylaxis has failed or is contraindicated. (NICE CG150, amended 2025)
Migraine
NICE CG150 (2012, amended June 2025) · British Association for the Study of Headache (BASH) 2023 · Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) 155 (2018)
Avoid triptans in hemiplegic migraine — relatively contraindicated due to vasoconstrictive mechanism. Discuss with Neurology before prescribing any acute specific treatment.
Hemiplegic migraine includes Familial Hemiplegic Migraine (FHM) (autosomal dominant; gene mutations in CACNA1A, ATP1A2, SCN1A) and Sporadic Hemiplegic Migraine (SHM). Both subtypes require specialist neurological assessment.
• Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) brain with Diffusion-Weighted Imaging (DWI) — to exclude stroke / Transient Ischaemic Attack (TIA) and structural cause; motor symptoms mandate urgent imaging
• Assessment for CADASIL (Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical Infarcts and Leukoencephalopathy) — a hereditary small vessel disease that can mimic hemiplegic migraine with cognitive decline and leukoaraiosis on Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
• Genetic counselling and testing if Familial Hemiplegic Migraine (FHM) is suspected — autosomal dominant with high penetrance; implications for family members
• Specialist-guided prophylaxis: flunarizine, verapamil, and lamotrigine have reported benefit; standard preventatives (propranolol, topiramate) have limited evidence in this subtype BASH Guidelines 2023 · NICE CG150 (amended 2025) · UK Medical Eligibility Criteria (UKMEC) 2016 (updated 2019) · International Classification of Headache Disorders 3rd edition (ICHD-3) Section 1.2.3
Step 1 — Simple Analgesics (mild-moderate attacks, or triptan-naïve)
▼| Drug | Dose | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ibuprofen | 400–600 mg at onset | Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug (NSAID) first-line if no contraindication |
| Aspirin | 900 mg at onset + antiemetic | Soluble preferred. Add Metoclopramide 10 mg routinely. |
| Paracetamol | 1 g (1000 mg) at onset | Less effective than Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs). Use if Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug (NSAID) contraindicated. |
Step 2 — Triptans (if Step 1 fails, or moderate-severe from onset)
▼| Drug | Dose / Route | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sumatriptan ★ | 50–100 mg oral · 10–20 mg nasal · 6 mg subcutaneous (SC) | Most evidence. Subcutaneous (SC) preferred if vomiting prominent; acts within 15–20 min. May repeat after 2 hours if headache returns. |
| Rizatriptan | 10 mg oral (5 mg if on Propranolol) | Faster onset. Wafer formulation useful with nausea. Reduce dose to 5 mg if co-prescribed with Propranolol (pharmacokinetic interaction). |
| Zolmitriptan | 2.5–5 mg oral or 5 mg nasal | Nasal route useful with prominent nausea. |
| Eletriptan | 40–80 mg oral | Higher efficacy; longer half-life with less headache recurrence within 24 hours. |
| Almotriptan | 12.5 mg oral | Good tolerability. Useful if side effects limit other triptans. |
Antiemetics — Add to Any Step
▼| Drug | Dose | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Metoclopramide | 10 mg oral or intramuscular (IM) | Dopamine antagonist. Improves gastric motility — enhances absorption of co-administered analgesics. Avoid prolonged use (tardive dyskinesia risk). MHRA 2014 restrictions on dose and duration apply. |
| Prochlorperazine | 3–6 mg buccal / 12.5 mg intramuscular (IM) | Buccal absorption useful when vomiting prevents oral medication. Intramuscular (IM) in out-of-hours or acute settings. |
| Domperidone | 10 mg oral | Does not cross blood-brain barrier (BBB) — fewer central side effects. Cardiac QT prolongation caution — avoid in hepatic impairment and with QT-prolonging drugs. |
Topiramate — MHRA Pregnancy Prevention Programme (PPP), June 2024: Topiramate must not be prescribed to women of childbearing potential unless all Pregnancy Prevention Programme (PPP) conditions are met: (1) two documented negative pregnancy tests, (2) use of highly effective contraception throughout treatment and for ≥4 weeks after stopping, (3) annual review with signed patient acknowledgement card. Topiramate is associated with a 2–3× increased risk of intellectual disability, Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in children exposed in utero. (MHRA Drug Safety Update, June 2024)
| Drug | Start | Target | Key Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Propranolol | 40 mg twice daily (BD) | 40–240 mg/day | Beta-blocker. Avoid in asthma, depression (note Healthcare Safety Investigation Branch (HSIB) alert — propranolol carries significant overdose risk in patients with depression and migraine, June 2024), Raynaud's phenomenon, and insulin-dependent diabetes. Reduce Rizatriptan dose to 5 mg if co-prescribing. Long-acting (LA) preparation available. |
| Topiramate | 25 mg nocte | 25–100 mg/day (divided) | MHRA Pregnancy Prevention Programme (PPP) mandatory before prescribing to any woman of childbearing potential. Common effects: cognitive slowing ("topiramate fog"), word-finding difficulty, weight loss, paraesthesia, renal stones. Highly teratogenic — increased risk of oral cleft, low birth weight, and neurodevelopmental disorders in children exposed in utero. (MHRA June 2024) |
| Amitriptyline | 10 mg nocte | 10–75 mg nocte | Off-label for migraine (licensed for depression; NICE CG150 now includes as equal option). Useful if comorbid poor sleep, Tension-Type Headache (TTH) overlap, or anxiety. Follow NICE NG46 safe prescribing and withdrawal guidance. Obtain Electrocardiogram (ECG) if dose >40 mg or cardiac risk factors present. |
If the first agent tried does not work or is not tolerated, try the second and then the remaining option, unless contraindicated by safety concerns. (NICE CG150, 2025)
| Drug | Dose | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Candesartan | 8–16 mg daily | Angiotensin Receptor Blocker (ARB). Off-label for migraine. Well tolerated. Useful if comorbid hypertension. Evidence from randomised controlled trials (Tronvik et al.). |
| Sodium Valproate | 400–1000 mg daily | Contraindicated in women and girls of childbearing potential unless enrolled in MHRA Pregnancy Prevention Programme (PPP). Two-specialist sign-off required for new prescribing in women under 55. NHS England restricted. (MHRA Jan 2024, updated Feb 2025) |
| Pizotifen | 0.5–1.5 mg nocte | Weight gain and sedation commonly limit use. Weaker evidence base. Use only if first-line options are exhausted or contraindicated. |
| Gabapentin | — | Do not offer Gabapentin for migraine prophylaxis. Explicitly not recommended by NICE CG150 (2015, reaffirmed 2025). |
Eligibility criteria: ≥4 migraine days/month AND failure of ≥3 preventatives, OR Chronic Migraine (CM). Must be initiated by Neurology or a Headache Specialist. May subsequently be monitored and repeated in primary care. Review efficacy at 3–6 months.
For predictable perimenstrual attacks (typically day -2 to +3 of menstruation). Consider short-course perimenstrual treatment when attacks are predictable and disabling.
| Drug | Dose & Timing | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Frovatriptan | 2.5 mg twice daily (BD), days -2 to +3 | Longest half-life triptan (~26 hours) — British Association for the Study of Headache (BASH) recommended for perimenstrual use due to sustained coverage and low recurrence rate. |
| Mefenamic acid | 500 mg three times daily (TDS) perimenstrually | Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drug (NSAID). Also useful for dysmenorrhoea — dual benefit. Take with food. |
| Transdermal oestrogen | 100 mcg patch, days -3 to +5 | Stabilises the oestrogen withdrawal drop that triggers perimenstrual attacks. Discuss via Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) or hormonal contraception pathway — see HRT Navigator. |
Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA)
British Society for Rheumatology (BSR) GCA Guidelines 2020 · Medical Emergency
Prednisolone 40–60 mg oral — start same day. Refer urgently to Rheumatology. Arrange Temporal Artery Biopsy (TAB) without delay. (British Society for Rheumatology (BSR) GCA Guidelines 2020)
999 / Emergency admission. Intravenous (IV) Methylprednisolone 500–1000 mg daily × 3 days. Same-day Ophthalmology referral.
Medication Overuse Headache (MOH)
NICE CG150 (2012, amended 2025) · British Association for the Study of Headache (BASH) Guidelines 2023
Headache on ≥15 days/month in a patient with a pre-existing primary headache disorder who has used acute medication on:
Clinically significant interactions relevant to headache prescribing. Always verify against current British National Formulary (BNF) / MHRA Summary of Product Characteristics (SmPC) before prescribing.
| Drug A | Drug B | Interaction & Mechanism | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Any Triptan | SSRIs / SNRIs (Fluoxetine, Sertraline, Venlafaxine etc.) |
Serotonin syndrome risk — additive serotonergic effect. Risk is low in practice but increases at higher doses or combinations. Features: agitation, tremor, hyperthermia, clonus, hyperreflexia. | Caution — not an absolute contraindication. Counsel patient on symptoms. Avoid Tramadol combination (higher risk). (MHRA 2006 · BNF) |
| Any Triptan | MAOIs / Moclobemide | Contraindicated — severe serotonin toxicity risk. Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitor (MAOI) inhibits triptan metabolism → dangerously elevated plasma levels. | Absolute contraindication. Allow 14-day washout after stopping irreversible MAOI before prescribing any triptan. (BNF) |
| Any Triptan | Ergotamine / Methysergide | Additive vasoconstrictive effect — risk of severe prolonged vasospasm / ischaemia. | Contraindicated — minimum 24-hour separation required between ergotamine and any triptan. (NICE CG150 · BNF) |
| Rizatriptan | Propranolol | Pharmacokinetic interaction — Propranolol inhibits Rizatriptan metabolism via Monoamine Oxidase A (MAO-A), raising Rizatriptan plasma levels by ~70%. | Reduce Rizatriptan dose to 5 mg (from 10 mg) in patients also taking Propranolol. (BNF · Rizatriptan SmPC) |
| Drug A | Drug B | Interaction & Mechanism | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Topiramate | Combined Oral Contraceptive Pill (COCP) | Enzyme induction at higher doses (≥200 mg/day) — Topiramate induces CYP3A4, reducing oestrogen and progestogen plasma levels and contraceptive efficacy. At standard migraine prophylaxis doses (≤100 mg/day) the risk is lower but not absent. Critical given Pregnancy Prevention Programme (PPP) requirements. | Use alternative highly effective contraception (intrauterine device (IUD), implant, or injectable) — not the Combined Oral Contraceptive Pill (COCP) alone. Mandatory under MHRA Pregnancy Prevention Programme (PPP). (MHRA June 2024 · Topiramate SmPC) |
| Topiramate | Valproate | Hyperammonaemia with encephalopathy — combination increases ammonia levels, even without hepatic disease. Can occur at therapeutic doses of both drugs. | Avoid combination where possible. If co-prescribed, monitor for confusion, lethargy, cognitive changes — check serum ammonia. (BNF · MHRA) |
| Topiramate | Lithium | Topiramate-induced nephrolithiasis and hypokalaemia may affect Lithium clearance — risk of Lithium toxicity. | Monitor Lithium levels closely if co-prescribed. Ensure adequate hydration. (BNF) |
| Topiramate | Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (Acetazolamide, Zonisamide) |
Additive renal stone risk — both inhibit carbonic anhydrase, increasing urinary pH and calcium phosphate stone formation. | Avoid combination. If unavoidable, ensure high fluid intake (>2L/day) and monitor renal function. (Topiramate SmPC) |
| Drug A | Drug B | Interaction & Mechanism | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Propranolol | Verapamil | Additive negative chronotropy and inotropy — both drugs slow atrioventricular (AV) conduction. Combination risk: complete heart block, severe bradycardia, haemodynamic compromise. | Contraindicated together in most circumstances. Do not co-prescribe without specialist cardiology input. (BNF) |
| Propranolol | Adrenaline (Epinephrine) | Paradoxical hypertension — beta-blockade leaves alpha-adrenergic vasoconstriction unopposed when adrenaline given, causing severe hypertensive response. | Alert anaesthetist / emergency team if patient on Propranolol. Relevant for allergy management and surgical settings. (BNF) |
| Propranolol | Insulin / oral hypoglycaemics | Masks hypoglycaemia symptoms — beta-blockade blunts tachycardia (key warning sign) and delays recovery from hypoglycaemia. | Avoid in insulin-dependent diabetes where possible. If used, counsel patient and carer on alternative hypoglycaemia symptoms (sweating, pallor). (BNF) |
| Drug A | Drug B | Interaction & Mechanism | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Amitriptyline | SSRIs / SNRIs | Additive serotonin effect + QTc prolongation — Fluoxetine and Paroxetine also inhibit CYP2D6, raising Amitriptyline plasma levels significantly, increasing cardiotoxicity risk. | If combination unavoidable, use lowest effective dose of Amitriptyline and monitor Electrocardiogram (ECG). Avoid Fluoxetine or Paroxetine co-prescription — use Sertraline or Citalopram (less CYP2D6 inhibition) if antidepressant needed. (BNF) |
| Amitriptyline | QT-prolonging drugs (Domperidone, Haloperidol, Azithromycin, Ondansetron) |
Additive QTc prolongation — risk of Torsades de Pointes (TdP) / ventricular arrhythmia, particularly at higher doses or in patients with hypokalaemia. | Obtain baseline Electrocardiogram (ECG). Review full medication list. Correct electrolytes before initiating. Use crediblemeds.org for updated QT risk categorisation. (BNF · MHRA) |
| Amitriptyline | MAOIs | Severe serotonin syndrome / hypertensive crisis — potentially fatal combination. | Absolute contraindication. 14-day washout required after irreversible MAOI; 24 hours after Moclobemide. (BNF) |
| Drug A | Drug B | Interaction & Mechanism | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Valproate | Lamotrigine | Valproate markedly inhibits Lamotrigine glucuronidation — doubles Lamotrigine half-life and plasma levels, dramatically increasing Stevens-Johnson Syndrome (SJS) risk. | If combination required (specialist only), halve Lamotrigine titration rate and target dose. (BNF · Lamotrigine SmPC) |
| Valproate | Aspirin (analgesic doses) | Displaces Valproate from protein binding — increases free (active) Valproate and risk of toxicity. Also additive antiplatelet effect raising bleeding risk. | Avoid high-dose Aspirin in patients on Valproate. Use Paracetamol for analgesia. (BNF) |
| Drug A | Drug B | Interaction & Mechanism | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metoclopramide | Antipsychotics (Haloperidol, Prochlorperazine) |
Additive dopamine antagonism — increased risk of extrapyramidal side effects (acute dystonia, akathisia, parkinsonism) and tardive dyskinesia with prolonged use. | Avoid combination where possible. Limit Metoclopramide to short-term use only (MHRA 2014: max 5 days). (BNF · MHRA 2014) |
| Metoclopramide | Opioids | Pharmacodynamic antagonism — Opioids delay gastric emptying; Metoclopramide increases it. Effects partially cancel — Metoclopramide less effective as prokinetic in opioid-treated patients. | Domperidone may be a better antiemetic choice in patients on regular opioids — acts peripherally on gut without opioid antagonism. (BNF) |
Clinical Tools
Interactive scoring tools and checklists for point-of-care use
Validated 5-question tool measuring headache-related disability over the past 3 months. NICE CG150 recommends offering prophylaxis when MIDAS grade ≥ II (score ≥6) combined with ≥4 headache days/month, or MIDAS grade ≥ III (score ≥11) regardless of frequency.
Source: Stewart WF et al. Neurology 2000;56:S20–S28. MIDAS questionnaire © Innovative Medical Research 1997. Reproduced for NHS clinical decision support use.
| Grade | Score | Disability Level | Clinical Action (NICE CG150) |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | 0–5 | Little or no disability | Reassurance. Simple analgesics. Lifestyle advice. Review if frequency increases. |
| II | 6–10 | Mild disability | Optimise acute treatment. Consider prophylaxis if ≥4 headache days/month. |
| III | 11–20 | Moderate disability | Offer prophylaxis. Review acute treatment adequacy. Screen for Medication Overuse Headache (MOH). |
| IV | ≥21 | Severe disability | Offer prophylaxis urgently. Consider neurology referral. Assess for Medication Overuse Headache (MOH). Explore impact on employment and daily living. |
Six-question validated tool assessing the impact of headache on daily life over the past 4 weeks. Quicker than MIDAS; useful for monitoring response to prophylaxis over time. Each question scored: Never (6) · Rarely (8) · Sometimes (10) · Very often (11) · Always (13).
Source: Kosinski M et al. Qual Life Res 2003;12:963–974. HIT-6™ © QualityMetric Inc. Reproduced for NHS clinical decision support use.
| Score Range | Impact Level | Clinical Action |
|---|---|---|
| ≤49 | Little or no impact | Reassurance. Reassess in 3–6 months or if pattern changes. |
| 50–55 | Some impact | Optimise acute treatment. Review trigger management. |
| 56–59 | Substantial impact | Consider prophylaxis. Screen for Medication Overuse Headache (MOH). |
| ≥60 | Severe impact | Offer prophylaxis. Consider neurology referral if not responding to two preventatives. |
Use HIT-6 at baseline and every 3–6 months to monitor treatment response. A reduction of ≥5 points is considered clinically meaningful.
High-flow oxygen is an effective acute treatment for Cluster Headache (~70% response rate) but requires a specialist-initiated Home Oxygen Order Form (HOOF) in NHS. This checklist guides the primary care referral letter to Neurology to ensure all information needed to expedite home oxygen is included.
| HOOF Field | What to Include in Referral |
|---|---|
| Diagnosis | Confirmed or strongly suspected Cluster Headache (International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD-3) criteria met — document features) |
| Attack frequency | Number of attacks per day, duration of each attack, current cluster period duration |
| Acute agents tried | Sumatriptan SC — prescribed? Effective? Dose used? |
| O₂ flow rate needed | Standard: 100% O₂ at 12–15 L/min for 15–20 minutes via non-rebreathe mask. State this explicitly. |
| Home circumstances | Confirm patient lives at home (not care home — different pathway); confirm no smoking in household (oxygen fire risk — absolute safety requirement) |
| Contraindications | No contraindication to high-flow oxygen: no Type 2 respiratory failure / Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) with CO₂ retention — document if spirometry / blood gases available |
Verapamil is initiated and titrated by Neurology. This checklist is for primary care awareness when monitoring a patient established on verapamil by a specialist.
| Dose Stage | Electrocardiogram (ECG) Required? | What to Look For |
|---|---|---|
| Before initiation | Yes — baseline | PR interval, QRS width, bradycardia, pre-existing conduction disease |
| Each dose increment | Yes — at each step | PR prolongation (>200 ms), 2nd or 3rd degree heart block, symptomatic bradycardia (<50 bpm) |
| Maintenance | 6-monthly | Ongoing PR monitoring; check for constipation, ankle oedema, fatigue |
| If symptomatic | Same day — urgent | Palpitations, syncope, severe bradycardia → hold dose, urgent cardiological review |
Referral Templates
Interactive templates — complete fields, then print or copy into your clinical system
Complete all fields. Click Generate Letter to produce a formatted referral. Use Print Letter to print or save as PDF.
Includes specific language requesting home oxygen initiation (HOOF pathway) and verapamil titration. Fill all fields for a complete referral.
For headache syndromes that do not fit standard primary diagnoses, are refractory, or where secondary pathology must be excluded.
Requesting Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) to exclude Multiple Sclerosis (MS), vascular compression, and other structural causes. Includes carbamazepine initiation status.
Curated links to accredited patient-facing information sources. All content is maintained by the source organisation — no patient information is hosted by SynaptAI. Use the filter to find resources by condition, then use Copy Link to paste into a clinical letter, AccuMail message, or text.